Columbia  <Bntoet*itp 

THE  LIBRARIES 


is 


Thousand 

YEARS 
of 


HUBBARD 
HISTORY 


866 


TO 


1895 

Compiled  by 

)Iq  f  Edward  Warren  M, 


A  HUBBABD 
DESCENDANT. 


PUBLISHED  BY 

HARLAN  PAGE  HUBBARD. 

Trubner  &  Co.,  London,  European  Agents. 


Entered  according  to  act  of  Congress,  in  the  year  1895,  by 

HARLAN  PAGE  HUBBARD, 
In  the  office  of  the  Librarian  of  Congress  at  Washington. 


H 


G.  W.  RODGERS   &   CO.. 

Fine  Art  Printers, 

409-413  pearl  street,  new  york. 


HARRIET    (HUBBARD)    DAY. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.) 


<~4VL£*4U>*ts, 


turves  ^L~Wio{  s&Z&^Zz&C  -VMs<r?%&i,j 


£fcy  n  / 


/ 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY 


SPECIAL    NOTICE. 


In  statistical  matter  generations  can  be  determined  by  the  variations  of  type. 
Paragraphs  usually  begin  with  the  name  of  the  person  of  a  certain  generation  in 
CAPITAL  LETTERS.  Tbe  children  of  the  succeeding  generation  will  be  found 
mi  SMALL  CAPITALS.  The  following  generation  will  be  denoted  hy  Italic  Letters. 
The  next  ami  succeeding  generations  will  be  printed  in  Roman  Letters. 


Letters  of  the  alphabet  in  GOTHIC  TYPE  prefixed  to  names  and  numbered 
...th  small  figures  indicate  that  elsewhere  the  name  will  be  found  (with  cor- 
responding letters  an.!  figures),  giving  extended  data. 


ABBREVIATIONS. 

Pvt,  private;  corpl,  corporal;  sergt,  sergeant:  Lt  and  Lieut,  Lieutenant;  Capt: 
Captain;  Col,  Colonel:  enl,  enlisted;  com'd,  commissioned;  dis  anddisch.  discharged; 
must'd,  mustered;  regt,  regiment;  mchd,  marched;  nios,  months;  yrs,  years; 
rec'd,  received;  b,  born;  bap,  baptized;  m,  married:  m  pub,  marriage  publishment: 
unin,  unmarried;  d,  died;  d  y,  died  young;  bur,  buried;  abt,  about;  adm,  admitted ; 
rem,  removed;  dau,  daughter;  wid,  widow:  EL  U.,  Harvard  University:  gr,  granted: 
gent,  gentleman. 


JV.  B. — The  publisher  will  be  glad  to  receive  additions  and  corrections,  together 
with  interesting  historical  data,  from  any  and  all  readers  of  this  ivork.  If  at  any 
time  they  arc  sufficient  to  warrant,  a  supplement  may  be  issued  or  a  revision  made. 

H.  P.  H. 


CO 

o 

05 


[For  Index  of  Names  see  End  of  this  Volume.] 

CHAPTERS.  Pages 

Origin  of  the  Name  Hubbard 17-27 

History  of  the  Hubbard  Coats  of  Arms 29-35 

Prominent  English  Hubbards  and  Hobarts 37-45 

Early  Settlers — Extinct  and  Untraceable  Lines 47-60 

Long  Island  Hubbards — Descendants  of  James  Hubbard  of  Gravesend 63-69 

The  Hulbard  and  Hulberd  Hubbards 71-73 

Descendants  of  John  Hubbard  of  Pomfret,  Ct 74-78 

Virginia  Hubbards 79-84 

Descendants  of  Richard  Hubbard  of  Salisbury,  Mass 85-95 

Military,  Naval,  and  College  Graduates 97-101 

Descendants  of  Philip  Hubbard  of  Kittery,  Me 102-120 

Revolutionary  War  Hubbard  Patriots 123-148 

Descendants  of  Edmund  Hobart  of  Hingham,  Mass 149-163 

Some  Hubbard  Royalists 164-165 

Descendants  of  William  Hubbard  of  Ipswich,  Mass 167-174 

The  LTnion's  Defenders — Commissioned  Officers 175-180 

Descendants  of  Rev.  William  Hubbard  and  Mary  Rogers 181-194 

Hubbard  Genealogists 195-197 

Descendants  of  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford,  Ct 199-205 

Old  Hubbard  Bibles 207-212 

Descendants  of  John  Hubbard  and  Mary  Merriam 213-242 

Old  Homesteads 243-252 

Descendants  of  Daniel  Hubbard  and  Elizabeth  Jordan 255r260 

Six  Hubbard  Sisters 261-263 

Descendants  of  William  Hubbard  and  Abigail  Dudley 264-265 

Hubbard  Places 267-268 

Descendants  of  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct 269-308 

Prominent  American  Hubbards 311-344 

A  Line  of  Maryland  Hubbards 347-350 

Abridged  Descent  Lines 353-387 

Unclassified  Hubbard  Data  and  Miscellany 399-448 

Index  of  Names 449-495 

Family  Records 497-512 

5 


389905 


6  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AX  J)  GENEALOGY. 

ILLUSTRATIONS. 

168  Different  Subjects  and  35  Engraved  Chapter  Headings. 

Pages. 

Annis  Melinda  Hubbard,  Enfield,  N.  H 375 

Autographs  of  Bubbards 404 

A  n  bur  J.  Bubbard  of  Toledo,  Ohio 438 

Badges  of  Nine  American  Patriotic  Societies 421 

Hank  of  England,  Rt.  Hon.  John  Gellibrand  Hubbard,  Director-General 36 

Battle  Ground  of  Bubbardton,  Vt 123 

Benjamin  D.  Greene  of  Boston,  Mass 193 

Celia  Lull  (Hubbard)  Gardner  of  New  London,  N.  H 443 

Clarence  A.  Hubbard  of  Lake  City,  Minn , 410 

( harles  Putnam  Hubbard,  Omaha,  Neb 378 

Chester  Dorman  Hubbard.  M.  C.  Wheeling,  W.  Va 166 

i  ,  ;tt  of  Arms  of  Edward  Hubbard  of  Burchanger,  Essex,  Eng 30 

Coat  of  Arms  of  Thomas  Bubbard  of  Calais 28 

it  of  Arms  of  Rt.  Hon.  John  Gellibrand  Hubbard,  Lord  Addington 32 

Coat  of  Arms  of  the  Hubbards  of  Durham,  Eng 36 

Colman  Smith  Bubbard  of  New  Haven,  Ct 297 

Concord  Minute  Man  at  Concord,  Mass 142 

1  laniel  Hubbard  of  New  London,  Ct 52 

1  (avid  Bubbard  Homestead  at  North  Charlestown,  N.  H 434 

Douglas  Hubbard,  Genealogist 16 

Dr.  Charles  Hubbard  of  Brooklyn,  N.  Y 369 

Dr.  Frank  Allen  Hubbard  of  Taunton,  Mass 352 

I  »r.  <  ieorge  Whipple  Hubbard  of  Nashville,  Tenn 369 

1  >r.  Jacobus  Hubbard,  of  Monmouth  County,  N.  J 316 

I  >r.  Jacobus  Hubbard  Homestead,  Monmouth  County,  N.  J 253 

1  >r.  Joseph  Bubbard  of  Boston.  Mass 106 

Dr.  William  Henry  Hubbard  of  Monmouth  County,  N.  J 62 

Early  Hubbard  Settlers  Defending  Their  Families  and  Firesides 61 

Edward  Warren  Day,  Compiler 16 

Edwin  Bubbard,  Genealogist. 16 

Elmer  Wilcox  Hubbard,  Lieutenant,  U.  S.  A 96 

Exterior  and  Interior  Views  of  Norwich  Cathedral,  Norfolk,  Eng 35 

Pac-Simile  of  One  of  Edwin  Hubbard's  "Ancestral  Registers" 198 

Fa. -Simile  of  One  of  Douglas  Hubbard's  "Trees" 196 

1  a.  -Simile  of  a  Letter  from  Rt.  Hon.  John  Gellibrand  Hubbard 22-23 

Fairbanks  Homestead— Oldest  in  New  England 46 

First  Congregational  Church  of  Middletown,  Ct 273 

First  Meeting  House  of  Middletown,  Ct 271 


ILLUSTRATIONS. 


7 


Gardiner  Greene  of  Boston,  Mass 193 

Gardiner  Greene  Hubbard,  LL.  D. ,  Washington,  D.  C 338 

General  James  Hubbard  of  Salisbury,  Ct 452 

General  George  Washington 124 

General  Thomas  Hamlin  Hubbard,  New  York  City 178 

George  David  Read  Hubbard  of  Brooklyn,  N.  Y 439 

George  Hubbard  Homestead  at  Guilford,  Ct 260 

Governor  Henry  Hubbard  of  Charlestown,  N.  H 345 

Governor  John  Hubbard  of  Hallowell,  Maine 88 

Governor  Lucius  Frederick  Hubbard  of  Red  Wing,  Minnesota 177 

Governor  Richard  Bennet  Hubbard  of  Texas 84 

Governor  Richard  Dudley  Hubbard  of  Hartford,  Ct 159 

Group  of  Twenty-five  Hubbards 397 

Gurdon  Saltonstall  Hubbard  of  Chicago 329 

Guy  Homer  Hubbard,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y 445 

Harlan  Page  Hubbard,  Publisher 16 

Harriet  (Hubbard)  Day,  with  Autograph  Dedication 3 

Henry  Eugene  Hubbard  of  Dansville,  N.  Y 411 

Henry  Griswold  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct 309 

Howard  Hubbard  of  Maryland 346 

Hubba  Stone  Priory,  Hubbaston,  England 25 

Hubbard  Free  Library  at  Hallowell,  Me 447 

Hubbard  Homestead  ("  Hubbard's  Inn  ")  at  Hatfield,  Mass 241 

Hubbard's  Newspaper  and  Bank  Directory  of  the  World 407 

James  Hubbard  of  Mapleton,  Ind. — A  Centenarian 435 

Jeremiah  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct 305 

Joel  Douglas  Hubbard,  M.  C,  of  Versailles,  Mo 316 

John  Erastus  Hubbard,  Montpelier,  Vt 441 

John  Henry  Hubbard,  M.  C,  Litchfield,  Ct 331 

Jonathan  Hatch  Hubbard,  M.  C,  of  Windsor,  Vt 316 

Joshua  Roberts  Hubbard,  South  Berwick,  Me 105 

Katherine  Eggleston  Hubbard  of  Dansville,  N.  Y 411 

Kellogg-Hubbard  Library  Building,  Montpelier,  Vt 441 

Landing  of  Hubba  and  Hingua  on  the  Shores  of  Northumbria 21 

Lemuel  Hubbard  of  Maryland 346 

Leverett  Marsden  Hubbard  (ex-Sec'y  of  State)  of  Wallingford,  Ct 160 

Lewis  Hubbard  of  Sandisfield,  Mass.,  and  Leroy,  N,  Y 285 

Luther  Prescott  Hubbard  of  Greenwich,  Ct 385 

Martha  (Coit-Hubbard)  Greene  of  New  London,  Ct.,  and  Boston,  Mass 51 

Mary  (Greene)  Hubbard  of  Boston,  Mass 52 

Mary  Porter  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct 262 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

illustrations-Continued.  Pa^es 

Memorial  Tablet  in  the  Old  Hobart  Church 152 

Mrs   Augustus  Phillips  (Anna  Bubbard),  of  Ithaca,  N.  Y 262 

Mrs.  Chauncey  Wetmore  (Rebecca  Hubbard),  of  Middletown,  Ct 262 

Mrs.  ( lolman  3.  Hubbard  and  Her  Youngest  Grandchildren 409 

Mrs.  Josiah  Meigs  Hubbard  (Sarah  Sill  Hubbard),  of  Middletown,  Ct 262 

Mrs.  Beth  S.  Ball  (Phoebe Hubbard),  of  Middletown.  Ct 262 

Mrs.  Uriah  Hayden  (Martha  Hubbard),  of  Essex,  Ct 262 

Nebraska  Bubbard  Homestead 434 

Nehemiah  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct 141 

Nehemiah  Hubbard  Homestead  (Two  Views)  at  Long  Hill,  Ct 254 

Norse  Galley  in  King  Hubba's  Fleet 19 

Old  Dutch  Hubbard  Bible,  Owned  by  Dr.  Chas.  Hubbard,  Brooklyn 206 

Old  Hubbard  Bible  (Two  Views)  Owned  by  Rev.  George  Henry  Hubbard 209 

Old  Hubbard  Chest,  Guilford,  Ct 395 

Old  Hobart  Church  at  Hingham,  Mass 150 

Philip  Hubbard  Homestead  and  Estate,  Three  Views,  at  Kittery,  Me 115 

Philip  Hubbard  Garrison  House  at  Kittery,  Me 253 

Phineas  Hubbard  of  Cambridge,  Mass 352 

Prof.  John  Hubbard  of  Dartmouth  College 369 

Queen  Elizabeth  of  England 211 

Rev   Bela  Hubbard,  D.D.,  New  Haven,  Ct 351 

Rev.  George  Henr}'  Hubbard  of  Foo  Chow,  China 369 

Rev.  George  Warren  Gardner,  D.  D.,  of  New  London,  N.  H 443 

Rev.  Thomas  Swan  Hubbard  of  Stockbridg-e,  Vt 316 

Rev.  Warren  Calhoun  Hubbard  of  Rochester,  N.  Y 219 

S  imuel  Birdsey  Hubbard  of  Jacksonville,  Fla 321 

Samuel  Brigham  Hubbard  of  Holden,  Mass 352 

Samuel  Dickinson  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct opposite  288 

Samuel  Dickinson  Hubbard  Old  Homestead  at  Middletown,  Ct 252 

Samuel  Hubbard,  LL.  D.,  Boston,  Mass 337 

Silas  i  J  raves  Hubbard  of  Hatfield,  Mass 352 

Six  Hubbard  Sisters  of  Middletown,  Ct 262 

Statue  of  Governor  Richard  Dudley  Hubbard,  Hartford,  Ct 87 

Stella  Laura  Hubbard,  West  Haven,  Ct 363 

Theodore  Sedgwick  Hubbard  of  Geneva,  N.  Y 70 

Thomas  Greene  of  Boston,  Mass 51 

Thomas  Hubbard,  Treasurer  Harvard  College 95 

Thomas  Hill  Hubbard,  M.  C,  Utica,  N.  Y 313 

Thomas  Rumbold  Hubbard  of  Maryland 346 

Three  Hubbard  Books 405 

Villaue  Green  at  Guilford,  Ct.— Old  Cemetery  Site 204 

Walter  Hubbard  of  Meriden,  Ct  310 

Wilbur  Watson  Hubbard  of  Maryland 346 

William  Arthur  Hubbard  of  Dansville,  N.  Y 411 

William  Gilmer  Hubbard  of  Columbus,  Ohio 399 

William  Henry  Hubbard  of  Duluth,  Minn 293 

William  Lemuel  Hubbard  of  Maryland 346 

William  Penn  Nixon,  Chicago,  111 387 


f)/nPlJMENTS 


"Nothing  without  labor. 


To  my  Hubbard  Kinsfolk  : 

For  many  years  I  have  been  of  the  opinion  that  there  was  sufficient 
material  and  data  in  regard  to  our  family  in  general,  which  if  properly 
compiled  would  make  a  very  interesting  volume  and  add  to  the  history 
of  our  country  and  its  records. 

Some  years  ago  I  was  urged  by  the  late  Edwin  Hubbard,  as  well  as 
Douglas  Hubbard,  to  aid  in  publishing  a  Hubbard  Genealogy,  but  I  was 
firmly  convinced,  upon  examination  (and  I  am  much  more  so  now),  that 
while  what  they  had  done  was  most  excellent,  that  it  did  not  go  far 
enough  to  be  broad,  comprehensive  and  satisfactory  to  all  the  branches. 

However,  it  is  largely  due  to  their  patient  work  in  exciting  an  interest 
in  keeping  records  which  makes  this  book  possible  to-day.  A  letter 
from  each,  to  the  publisher,  after  they  had  passed  "  three  score  and  ten," 
will  be  found  under  miscellaneous  on  page  401,  and  both  show  that  they 
felt  the  incompleteness  of  their  work. 

A  bright,  intelligent  man,  loyal  to  the  memory  of  his  Hubbard  mother, 
was,  however,  already  grown,  who  stood  ready  to  pick  up  the  broken 
fragments  and  cement  them,  with  other  data,  together  into  presentable 
shape.  I  refer  to  Mr.  Edward  Warren  Day,  who  modestly  insists  that 
his  title  shall  be  simply  "  compiler."  Fully  as  much  credit  is  due  to  him 
as  to  any  one  else,  if  not  more,  and  I  am  sure  that  the  army  of  Hubbards, 
of  all  "  clans  "  and  "  tribes,"  will  not  be  slow  in  according  it  to  him. 

I  have  known  of  the  careful  and  painstaking  work  which  he  has  given 

to  all  of  the  lines,  taking  up  the  broken  and  incomplete  chains  of  Edwin 

and  Douglas  (with  their  forty  years  work)  at  their  death  a  few  years 

ago   spending  his  time  and  money  freely,  traveling  and  buying  records 

9 


IO 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 


from  t<>\vn,  parish  and  probate  clerks  and  other  sources;  and  I  have 
i  marveled  at  his  patience  and  perseverance  in  untangling  the  mixed 
threads,  and  keeping  straight  the  mountains  of  dates  and  names. 

When  I  had  the  opportunity,  as  a  publisher  of  experience,  of  inspect- 
ing the  mass  of  highly  interesting  and  instructive  manuscript  which  Mr. 
Day  had  prepared,  in  addition  to  the  genealogical  part,  I  felt  sure  that 
the  time  had  come  to  perpetuate  it,  and  give  to  our  family  a  record  of 
which  all  will  be  proud. 

Here  it  is,  not  "  absolutely  perfect  "  perhaps,  for  we  are  only  human, 
but  it  is  from  the  best  possible  obtainable  records.  The  book  is  of  ne- 
sitya  good  deal  like  a  good  huckleberry  pie,  in  that  it  will  be  found  full 
of  good  huckleberries  and  with  but  little  crust.  Interesting  matter  kept 
coming  up  to  the  time  of  going  to  press,  so  that  it  has  increased  the 
size  of  the  book,  by  at  least  ioo  pages,  over  what  I  anticipated.  Hence 
an  increase  of  cost  to  me;  hence  the  increase  of  price  to  all  who  did  not 
order  in  advance  of  publication. 

As  publisher,  I  have  spared  neither  labor  nor  expense  to  produce  a 
book  of  highest  grade  and  quality,  as  well  as  profuseness  of  illustration 
and  general  mechanical  excellence.  I  am  proud  of  its  appearance  and 
believe  all  other  members  of  the  "tribe"  will  be  pleased  with  it.  If 
so,  should  like  to  hear  from  you,  saying  how  much  you  are  pleased. 

I  know  that  it  is  the  part  of  a  host  who  is  entertaining  a  distinguished 
company  to  see  that  the  guests  are  properly  introduced  and  grouped. 
What  is  true  in  a  social  gathering  is  true  in  such  an  eclectic  book  as  this. 
Therefore  I  take  pleasure  in  introducing  all  the  Hubbardsto  each  other, 
through  this  choicest  mosaic  history  of  one  thousand  years. 
With  kindest  regards  to  each  and  all,  I  am, 

Yours  very  trulv. 


Descended  from  GEORGE  of  MIDDLETOWN. 


38  Times  Building,  41  Park  Row,  New  York  City. 

Where  "  the  latch  string  "  is  always  out. 

—  — SPECIAL     NOTICE. 

The  price  ot  this  "Hubbard  History  and  Genealogy,"   after  publication  (by  express  at  purchaser's 
■    .  is  : 

Bound  in  Embossed  Cloth $10.00 

"  Turkey  Morocco  Leather  (back  and  cover) i5.oo 

Full  Russia  Leather  (embossed) 20.00 

The  above  are  printed  on  the  finest  super  calendered  paper. 
\;i   hdttion  <ie  luxe,  limited   to  50  copies,  printed  on  heavy  coated  plate  paper,  bound  only  in  full 

leather.     Price  $.-5.00. 
Name  stamped  on  front  cover  in  gold-leaf,  $1.00. 

t-f  Those  remitting  check  or  money-order  or  cash  with  the  order,  which  saves  expense  of  collect. 
later,  will  receive  the  book  express  charges  prepaid  to  all  railroad  points. 


ion- 


With  sharpen'd  sight  pale  antiquaries  pore, 

The  inscription  value,  but  the  rust  adore. 

This  the  blue  varnish  that  the  green  endears. 

The  sacred  rust  of  twice  ten  hundred  years— Alexander  Pope. 


A  FAINT  frost  of  age  is  beginning  to  encrust  this  country,  and  saviors 
of  historical  salvage  must  at  once  rescue  from  oblivion  that  which 
will  be  precious  and  invaluable  to  posterity.  The  time  is  scarcely  yet, 
perhaps,  but  is  fast  approaching,  when  genealogy  will  be  highly  prized. 
Genealogy  and  biography  are  the  two  eyes  of  history,  yet  the  former  is 
generally  assailed  and  ridiculed,  as  most  incoming  strange  customs  are. 
Horses  and  dogs  can  have  their  pedigrees  preserved  with  perfect  pro- 
priety, but  apply  the  practice  to  humanity  and  it  becomes  an  idle  con- 
ceit! So  saith  our  worldly-wise  neighbor.  Yet  preserved  genealogical 
records  have  restored  to  rightful  heirs  many  millions  in  estates  that 
would  otherwise  have  been  lost  to  them. 

It  is  not  an  indication  of  vain-gloriousness  or  empty  conceit  that 
prompts  us  to  record  the  careers  of  our  ancestors,  environ  their  memo- 
ries with  circlets  of  laurel,  or  disparage  the  plebeian  at  the  expense  of 
the  patrician.  The  great  Cicero  was  of  plebeian  birth,  though  a  monu- 
ment of  nobility  of  character,  and  quite  fittingly  did  he  crush  the  pomp- 
ous patrician  who  said  to  him,  "  I  am  a  patrician;  you  are  a  plebeian." 
"  True,"  replied  the  grand  Roman,  "  but  the  nobility  of  my  family  be- 
gins with  me;  your's  ends  with  you." 

George  Lillo,  a  London  dramatist,  once  said:  "A  respectable  birth 
and  fortune,  though  they  make  not  a  bad  man  good,  yet  they  are  a  real 
advantage  to  a  worthy  one,  and  place  his  virtues  in  the  fairest  light." 
The  compiler  firmly  believes  this,  and  also  that  fifty  years  hence  will 
find  the  published  family  genealogy  occupying  the  centre-table  or 
library  shelf  with  the  Bible,  Shakspeare,  and  other  standard  literature. 
Our  ancestors  paid  too  expensively  in   sweat,  suffering,  and  blood  to 


12 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


cement  the  foundation  stones  of  the  governmental  superstructure  we 
now  so  peacefully  and  prosperously  occupy  to  be  forgotten,  slighted,  or 
ignored  by  succeeding  generations,  so  largely  made  up  of  vandals  and 
mammon-worshippers,  and  in  whose  breasts  no  Divine  spark  burns  for 
things  noble,  holy,  venerable,  or  antiquated,  but,  instead,  a  consuming 
fire  to  possess  those  riches  of  the  earth  that  so  often  "  take  unto  them- 
selves wings  and  fly  away  like  an  eagle  toward  heaven."  America  is 
now  peopled  with  restless  spirits  who  "  haven't  time  "  for  research,  rest, 
or  recreation — animation  to-day,  clay  to-morrow  !  This  is  the  condition 
of  the  present  age.  O  tcmpora  !  O  mores !  We  are  told,  also,  that  we 
are  not  "progressive"  when  we  live  in  the  past  or  indulge  in  retrospec- 
tion, though  the  philosopher  does  it  to  learn  his  lessons  in  philosophy. 
The  philosopher  lives  in  the  past,  the  animal  in  the  present,  the  am- 
bitious in  the  future.  The  writer  rejoices  that  he  is  not  in  harmony 
with  the  spirit  of  the  present  times.  He  loves  to  exhume,  wonder  at, 
and  admire  the  antiquated.  He  wants  landmarks  preserved  and  rever- 
enced, be  they  old  houses,  decaying  graveyards,  ancient  books,  or  ven- 
erable trees.  Republishing  historic  literature,  legends  and  traditions, 
building  memorial  monuments  to  the  heroic,  and  perpetuating  family 
names  meet  with  his  hearty  approbation.  William  Makepeace  Thack- 
eray said:  "As  you  like  your  father  to  be  an  honorable  man,  why  not 
your  grandfather  and  his  ancestors  before  him  ?"  Let  us,  then,  venerate 
their  memories,  reset  their  falling  tombstones,  record  their  achieve- 
ments— simple  or  great — chronicle  their  names  and  virtues,  and  avoid  a 
prospective  charge  of  being  a  generation  of  ingrates.  The  stimulation 
of  such  inward  reflections  brings  forth  this  book,  imperfect,  and  sprinkled 
here  and  there  with  errors,  as  it  doubtless  is.  From  those  unused  to 
untwisting  genealogical  tangles  the  compiler  expects  but  little  compas- 
sion for  mistakes,  but  from  those  familiar  with  such  distracting  compli- 
cations he  looks  for  some  charity.  The  novelist  and  the  poet  have  much 
the  advantage  over  the  historian.  They  can  let  fly  ubiquitiously  their 
harmless  darts  of  fancy,  tipped  and  plumed  with  sentiment  and  poesies> 
but  the  chronologist  must  always  abide  in  the  domain  of  prosaic  facts,  a 
prey  ever  for  the  watchful,  ambushed  critic,  who  mercilessly  trips  him 
at  every  opportunity,  and  with  malignant  joy  points  out  his  errors. 
Verily  there  are  but  few  roses,  yet  many  thorns  encountered  in  the 
genealogist's  path.  Volunteers  to  assist  in  such  labors  are  few,  finan- 
cial donators  still  more  scarce  (philanthropists  donate  to  libraries, 
not  to  the  makers  of  libraries),  and  the  votary  must  comfort  himself 
with  the  solacing  thought  that  "  the  reward  of  good  works  is  like  dates — 
sweet,  and  ripening  late." 

EDWARD  WARREN  DAY- 


As  it  is  the  commendation  of  a  good  huntsman  to  find  game  in  a  ride  wood,  so  it  is  no  imputa- 
tion if  he  hath  not  caught  all—  Plato. 


THE  compiler  of  this  volume  claims  not  that  it  is  a  Hubbard  Geneal- 
ogyper  se.  It  is,  to  be  more  exact  a  compendium,  or  Hubbard  Hand- 
book. A  genealogy,  pure  and  simple,  of  all  Hubbard  lines,  completed 
to  date,  would  rival  Webster's  Dictionary  in  both  size  and  expense. 
Such  a  volume  will  never  be  compiled.  The  obstacles  are  too  great. 
Descendants  will  not  answer  letters,  promptly  or  at  all,  furnish  neces- 
sary data,  or  subscribe  freely  to  the^e  enterprises,  so  something  less 
must  we  fain  be  content  with.  It  is  hard  to  stir  the  stagnant  pools  of 
genealogical  indifference  into  a  boiling  enthusiasm.  Better  talent 
should  have  been  secured  to  concrete  these  historical  and  genealogical 
scraps,  but  volunteers  do  not  materialize.  The  mantles  of  Edwin 
Hubbard  and  Douglas  Hubbard  (veteran  and  painstaking  genealogists) 
seem  to  have  fallen  to  the  ground.  Both  died  very  poor.  They  lived 
not  long  enough  to  enjoy  appreciation  or  the  harvest  time.  With  them 
genealogy  was  an  applied  science,  with  the  writer  a  diversion  only,  and 
he  cheerfully  admits  that  without  their  blazoning  marks  on  the  trees  in 
the  dense  forest  of  genealogy  he  would  have  been  many  times  hope- 
lessly lost. 

Beginning  with  the  first  ancestor  of  each  line  in  this  country,  there 
are  to-day  seven  or  more  distinct  Hubbard  branches.  By  adding  to 
these  the  "  Hobart "  line,  the  "  Hulbard-Hubbard  "  line,  a  ''Line  of 
Maryland  Hubbards  "  and  the  line  of  "Virginia  Hubbards,"  we  have 
about  a  dozen  lines  producing  Hubbards  to  enrich  this  great  Common- 
wealth. The  compiler  is  in  correspondence  with  representatives  of  all 
these  lines,  and  there  may  be  still  other  lines  extant.  If  so,  they  have 
so  far  escaped  his  winnowings.  It  is  possible  John  Hubbard,  son  of 
Anthony  Hubbard  of  Dedham,  may  have  a  living  posterity;  also  the 
male  children  of  widow  Elizabeth  Hubbard  of  Boston,  and  the  issue  of 
Benjamin  Hubbard  of  Boston,  who  returned  to  England  and  there  died, 
13 


I4  HUBBARD   HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

though  signs  indicate  that  some  of  his  children  came  back,  possibly 
Thomas  and  Richard.  This  can  not  yet  be  positively  proven,  those 
surnames  being  very  common  among  early  Hubbard  families. 

It  being  so  easy  to  become  bewildered  in  tracing  genealogical  threads, 
it  is  hoped  the  difficulty  has  been  somewhat  lessened  by  interspersing 
miscellaneous  Hubbard  matter  between  different  branches.  Blank 
leaves  have  also  been  added  to  permit  descendants  to  take  up  their  lines 
where  the  compiler  leaves  them. 

The  sources  of  information  herein  utilized  are  too  numerous  to  more 
than  briefly  mention.  A  considerable  portion  came  from  England,  the 
major  portion  directly  from  town  clerks'  records,  probate  records  and 
early  deeds,  and  from  professional  genealogists,  a  little  from  published 
histories,  some  from  Bible  and  prayer-book  registrations,  some  from 
tombstone  inscriptions  and  some  from  "trees"  loaned. 

The  compiler  would  be  unmindful  of  the  requirements  of  gratitude 
not  to  herewith  record  his  deep  obligations  to  Robert  vSage  Griswold, 
William  Henry  Hubbard  and  Hon.  Gardiner  Greene  Hubbard  for  their 
loyal  support  and  substantial  encouragement.  Without  their  contribu- 
tions and  devotion  to  this  enterprise  the  volume  would  have  been 
longer  delayed  in  appearance  and  less  satisfactory  in  contents.  Mr. 
Griswold  is  a  great  grandson  of  Jeremiah  Hubbard  (through  Bathsheba 
Hubbard)  and  also  of  Constant  Griswold,  both  Revolutionary  War  par- 
ticipants. He  is  a  member  of  the  Sons  of  the  American  Revolution,  a 
genuine  antiquary,  and  loyal  to  genealogists,  who  write  to  him  from 
every  locality,  and  lives  in  Cromwell,  near  Middletown,  Ct.  Mr.  Wil- 
liam Henry  Hubbard  is  a  leading  manufacturer  of  Duluth,  Minn,  (see 
Descent  Line),  a  genealogist  himself  of  no  small  attainments,  and  has 
contributed  voluminous  data  to  this  book.  Gardiner  Greene  Hubbard, 
President  of  the  National  Geographic  Society  (see  Prominent  Ameri- 
can Hubbards),  as  soon  as  he  became  satisfied  of  the  good  faith  of  the 
enterprise,  gave  timely  financial  aid,  and  personally  attended  to  pro- 
curing valuable  genealogical  matter  outside  of  the  compiler's  reach. 
Such  support  can  not  be  overrated  or  overlooked. 

Non-contributors  of  family  or  ancestral  data  should  not  feel  disap- 
pointed if  much  of  their  family  data  should  happen  to  be  omitted  in 
this  volume,  or  be  printed  incorrectly.  Over  3,000  Hubbard  descend- 
ants have  been  invited  by  circular  to  contribute  their  genealogical 
possessions,  yet  few  have  responded.  Knowing  full  well  that  errors 
spring  up  like  mushrooms,  while  truth  rises  but  slowly,  the  compiler 
claims  only  correctness  approximately  in  the  contents  of  this  volume. 
Many  dates  copied  from  miscellaneous  sources  he  mistrusts,  yet  has  had 
no  means  of  verification. 


PREFACE.  i- 

He  also  presents  his  sincere  thanks  to  the  following-  subscribers  for 
encouragement  and  data  contributed:  Mrs.  Thomas  Scranton  Hubbard, 
Urbana,  111.;  Mrs.  Lucy  Lyman  Hubbard,  Kenilworth,  Ohio;  Lieut. 
Elmer  Wilcox  Hubbard,  U.  S.  A.;  John  Gordon  Hubbard,  Dracut, 
Mass. ;  Hon.  Bela  Hubbard  and  Collins  Baughmann  Hubbard,  Detroit, 
Mich.;  Robert  James  Hubbard,  Cazenovia,  N.  Y.;  Frederick  Hubbard 
and  Nathan  Hobart,  New  York  City;  Moses  Paul  Hubbard  and  Adol- 
phus  Skinner  Hubbard,  San  Francisco,  Cal.;  Henry  Seward  Hubbard, 
Santa  Monica,  Cal.;  Henry  Eugene  Hubbard,  Dansville,  N.  Y.;  Dr. 
Charles  Hubbard,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.;  Rev.  Thomas  Swan  Hubbard, 
Stockbridge,  Vt;  John  Barrett  Hubbard  and  Mary  Linsley  Hubbard, 
Guilford,  Ct.;  Dr.  George  Whipple  Hubbard,  Nashville,  Tenn.;  Robert 
Morris  Hubbard,  St.  Louis,  Mo.;  Dr.  Frank  Allen  Hubbard,  Taun- 
ton, Mass.;  Richard  Henry  Sylvester,  Mrs.  Sardis  Little  Crissey, 
William  Francis  Hubbard  and  Ervin  Samuel  Hubbard,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C;  Dr.  Chauncey  George  Hubbard,  Hornellsville,  and  Theo- 
dore Sedgwick  Hubbard,  Geneva,  N.  Y.;  John  Erastus  Hubbard, 
Montpelier,  Vt.;  Mrs.  Marion  Elizabeth  Warren  and  Mrs.  Mary 
Hubbard  Flagg,  Holden,  Mass.;  Mrs.  Lucy  Maria  Hubbard  Bidwell 
and  Mrs.  Mary  Anna  Hubbard  Bunce,  Middletown,  Ct.  (a  most  loyal 
supporter);  William  Matthew  Strader,  Ashtabula,  Ohio  (a  zealous 
contributor);  Walter  Hubbard,  Meriden,  Ct.;  Charles  Wells  Hubbard, 
Mrs.  Harriette  Day  Foster  and  Dr.  Joseph  Hubbard,  Boston,  Mass.; 
Mrs.  Samuel  Wood,  Northboro,  Mass.;  Phineas  Hubbard,  Cambridge, 
Mass.;  Miss  Emily  Rebecca  Hough,  Meriden,  Ct.;  Mrs.  Deborah  Hub- 
bard Rowland,  New  Brunswick,  N.  J.;  Mrs.  Olive  Elizabeth  Noyes, 
South  Berwick,  Me.;  Samuel  Henfield  Gooch,  Newton  Centre,  Mass.; 
Hollis  Bowman  Page,  Waverley,  Mass.;  John  Merwin  Hubbard,  West 
Haven,  Ct.;  and  Francis  Henry  Bergen,  Staten  Island,  N.  Y. 

The  following  professional  genealogists  have  rendered  material  assist- 
ance: Horace  Eugene  Mather,  Hartford,  Ct.;  George  Tolman,  Concord, 
Mass.;  Emily  Wilder  Leavitt,  Boston,  Mass.;  Richard  Brock,  Rich- 
mond, Va.;  Charles  Wesley  Tibbetts,  Dover,  N.  H.;  Sidney  Perley  and 
Eben  Putnam,  Salem,  Mass.;  Robert  Eden,  vicar,  Wymondham,  Eng.; 
Everard  Green,  Rouge  Dragon,  Herald's  College,  London,  Eng.,  and 
Edward  Salmon,  British  Museum,  London. 

E.  W.  D 


i6 


(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford  and  Middletown,  Ct.) 


A  good  name  is  like  precious  ointment.    It  filleth  all  round  about  and  will  not  easily  away.    For 
the  odors  of  ointments  are  more  durable  than  flowers— Lord  Bacon. 


THE  compiler  having  received  from  high  English  authority  (notably 
from  a  Member  of  Parliament,  the  late  Right  Hon.  John  Gelli- 
brand  Hubbard,  Baron,  the  first  Lord  Addington  and  Governor-General 
of  the  Bank  of  England)  versions  unanimously  supporting  the  family 
traditions  regarding  the  origin  of  the  name  HUBBARD,  with  consider- 
able confidence  presents  herewith  the  following  narrative,  with  its  very 
dramatic  climaxes,  as  the  correct  source  of  the  name,  which  name,  with 
its  time-producing  corruptions,  has  now  overspread  the  world.  From  a 
crude,  though  reliable,  semi-barbaric  Danish  and  Saxon  literature  these 
historic  gems  have  been  mined  and  burnished,  and  are  now  offered  to 
HUBBARD  descendants  with  the  compiler's  strongest  assurances  that 
the  appraisement  of  their  historic  worth  has  not  been  one  of  overvalue; 
nor  has  it  been  colored  at  the  expense  of  probity  with  rich  and  sensa- 
tional embellishment.  The  latter  indulgence  is  the  license  of  the  poet 
and  novelist  but  not  that  of  the  historian  and  genealogist. 

Upon  the  accession  of  King  Ethelwulf  in  839  to  the  throne  of  Wes- 
sex — consisting  of  the  provinces  of  Kent,  Essex  and  Surrey,  in  Britain — 
about  the  first  matter  to  spur  his  activity  was  the  beginning  of  imme- 
diate preparations  to  resist  the  invasions  of  the  rapacious  Danes,  or 
Norsemen,  who  ruled  the  northern  seas,  the  Orkney  and  Shetland 
Islands,  and  Jutland  (or  the  Scandinavian  continent)  with  unquestioned 
authority  and  rigor.  Scandinavia  was  the  birthplace  of  a  savage  set 
of  men  who,  like  the  Saxons  of  old,  spent  the  best  portion  of  their  lives 
on  the  waves,  despising  the  tranquil  enjoyments  of  peace,  and  cultivat- 
ing instead  the  art  of  unlawful  acquisition  and  rapine.  Their  maritime 
situation  familiarized  them  with  the  science  of  navigation.  The  children 
of  these  sea-kings  were  educated  to  piracy.  The  eldest  son  received 
17 


!  s  HUBBA  RD  HIS  TOR } '  A  ND  GENE  A  LOGY. 

the  patrimony  of  the  father,  and  the  remaining  sons  were  given  swords 
and  ships  with  which  they  were  expected  to  go  forth  and  acquire  glory 
and  riches.  Until  the  ninth  centnry  these  adventurous  sea-robbers  con- 
fined their  operations  to  their  own  waters.  But  later  on,  possessed  of 
the  spirit  of  Alexander  the  Great,  and  hearing  stories  of  the  great 
wealth  of  the  Latin  dominions,  they  embarked  for  the  southern  seas  on 
their  freebooting  expeditions.  Their  first  attempts  were  directed 
toward  the  British  Isles.  Then  they  desolated  the  coasts  of  Gaul  and 
Spain,  and,  venturing  into  the  Mediterranean  Sea,  taught  also  the  in- 
habitants of  those  shores  how  to  tremble.  The  establishment  of  the 
duchy  of  Normandie,  the  Danish  dynasty  in  England,  and,  afterward,  a 
kingdom  in  Italy,  are  monuments  of  their  courage,  activity  and  per- 
severance. 

They  made  three  important  descents  into  England  during  the  ninth 
century,  one  being  upon  the  Isle  of  Thanet,  and  the  other  two  upon 
the  coasts  of  Northumberland  and  into  the  county  of  Kent.  The 
famous  King  of  the  Franks,  Charlemagne,  sometimes  called  "  Charles 
the  Hammer,"  son  of  Pepin  the  Short  and  Bertha,  and  grandson  of 
Charles  Martel,  conqueror  of  the  Huns,  Slavons,  Saracens,  Arabs  and 
Britons,  wept  tears  of  sorrow  at  the  future  of  his  people  at  the  hands  of 
these  wild  Northmen.  According  to  Guizot's  History  of  France  he  thus 
expressed  himself  to  his  Court:  "  Know  ye,  my  lieges,  wherefore  I  weep 
so  bitterly  ?  Of  a  surety  I  fear  not  lest  these  fellows  should  succeed  in 
injuring  me  by  their  miserable  piracies  ;  but  it  grieveth  me  deeply  that 
whilst  I  live  they  should  have  been  nigh  to  touching  at  this  shore,  and 
I  am  a  prey  to  violent  sorrow  when  I  foresee  what  evils  they  will  heap 
upon  my  descendants  and  their  people."  Charlemagne  died  Jan.  28, 
814;  and  during  the  ninth  and  tenth  centuries  in  verification  of  his  pre- 
diction the  Northmen  made  no  less  than  forty-seven  incursions  into 
France. 

John  Lingard,  D.  D.,  a  famous  Catholic-English  historian,  says  in 
better  and  more  perspicuous  language  than  the  compiler  can  perhaps 
summon,  that  "among  the  sea-kings  was  Ragnar  Lodbrog  [Regner 
Lodbrok  or  Lodbrock]  and  his  two*  sons,  Hingua  and  HUBBA  [Ingua 
or  Inguar — Ubba  or  UbboJ  who  was  one  of  the  most  adventurous  and 
successful.  On  the  shores  of  the  Baltic,  in  the  Orkneys  and  the 
Hebrides,  in  Ireland,  Scotland,  and  Northumbria,  he  had  diffused  the 
terror  of  his  name.  In  France  the  intrepid  pirate  had  conducted  his 
fleet  up  the  Seine,  spread  the  flames  of  devastation  on  each  of  its  banks, 
and  taken  possession  of  Paris,  which  was  redeemed  from  destruction 


*  Thomas  Keisditley,  historian,  says  "  three  sons— Halfdan,  Hingvar,  and  Hubba." 


O RIG IX  OF  THE  NAME  HUBBARD. 


19 


only  by  the  payment  of  ,£7,000  of  silver.  By  his  orders  ships  of  a 
larger  size  than  had  hitherto  been  navigated  by  his  countrymen  were 
constructed  for  an  invasion  of  England;  but,  whether  it  was  owing  to 
the  violence  of  the  weather  or  the  unskilfulness  of  the  navigators,  they 
were  wrecked  on  the  coast  of  Northumbria.  Ragnar  with  several  of 
his  followers  reached  the  shore,  and,  heedless  of  the  consequences, 
commenced  their  usual  career  of  depredation.  Though  the  Northum- 
brians had  cast  off  the  yoke  imposed  on  them  by  Egbert,  their  country 
was  torn  by  civil  dissensions;  and  at  this  very  moment  their  chieftains 
were  divided  by  the  opposite  pretensions  of  two  competitors,  Osbert 
and  ^FUla.  At  the  first  news  of  the  descent  of  the  Northmen,  the  latter 
flew  to  the  coast,  fought  with  the  plunderers,  made  Ragnar  prisoner, 
and  immediately  put  him  to  death.  He  is  said  to  have  been  devoured 
by  snakes,  and  to  have  consoled  his  last  moments  with  the  hope  '  that 
the  cubs  of  the  boar  would  avenge  his  fate.'  Nor  was  he  disappointed. 
His  sons,  Hingua  and  HUBBA,  who  were  in  Denmark,  swore  to  avenge 
his  murder.  The  relations,  the  friends,  and  the  admirers  of  the  dead 
chieftain  crowded  to  their  standard,  and  eight  sea-kings,  with  twenty 
jarls  [noblemen]  combined  their  forces  in  the  pursuit  of  revenge  and 
plunder." 

In  868  King  Ethelwulf  having  been  dead  several  years — also  his  two 
older  sons,  Ethelbald  and  Ethelbert— the  crown  of  Wessex  descended 
about  871  upon  Ethelred,  the  third  son.  There  also  remained  the 
youngest  son,  Alfred,  known  afterward  as  Alfred  the  Great,  who  ably 
assisted  his  brother  in  their  stout  resistance  against  these  ubiquitous 
Norsemen. 

In  the  Fall  of  866,  with  an 
immense  fleet  and  20,000  war- 
riors, Hingua  and  HUBBA 
landed  on  the  coast  of  East- 
Anglia  or  Kent  to  avenge  the 
foul  death  of  the  "old  boar." 
They  fortified  their  camp 
strongly  and  awaited  rein- 
forcements from  the  Baltic, 
spending  the  winter  in  pro- 
curing horses  and  in  corrupt- 
ing the  loyalty  of  some  of  the 
Northumberland      chieftains 

toward  their  own  king,  Ethelred.  In  February,  867,  they  left  their 
camp  on  the  coast  and  marched  landward  and  seized  York.  Osbert 
and  ^Ella  patched  up  a  truce  between  themselves,  united  their  forces, 


A   NORSE  GALLEY   IN    KING    HUBBA  S  FLEET. 


20 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 


and  engaged  Hingua  and  HUBBA  outside  of  the  city,  and  eventually 
drove  them  back  within  its  walls.  The  Northumbrians  battered 
breaches  in  the  walls,  rushed  through,  and  fell  upon  Hingua  and 
HUBBA'S  forces  with  great  vigor  and  fury,  but  the  ferocious  Norse- 
men in  their  savage  desperation  finally  turned  and  dispelled  their 
relentless  foes.  Osbert  was  killed  and  yElla  was  taken  prisoner. 
Hingua  and  HUBBA  now  enjoyed  the  exquisite  pleasure  of  torturing 
the  men  who  had  thrown  their  father  into  a  cage  of  snakes  to  be  de- 
voured, and  well  they  used  the  opportunity.  The  punishment  they  in- 
flicted upon  yElla  is  called  in  Danish  vernacular  "at  rista  orn."  It 
consists  in  dividing  the  ribs,  drawing  the  lungs  through  the  opening 
and  pouring  salt  upon  them.  Thus  was  King  Ragnar  Lodbrog  (/.  e., 
Ragnar  of  the  "  Shaggy  Brogues  ")  avenged  by  his  loyal  "  cubs." 

This  last  victory  gave  to  Hingua  and  HUBBA  undisputed  possession 
of  all  that  dominion  south  of  the  Tyne  and  north  of  Nottingham.     The 
native  inhabitants  were  constrained  to  purchase  the  friendship  of  Hingua 
and  HUBBA,  who  immediately  began  to  prepare  for  a  southern  inva- 
sion.    Leaving  a  small  force  in  possession  of  York  to  cultivate  the  coun- 
try and  retain  possession  of   it,  they  proceeded  against  Ethelred  and 
Alfred.     They  crossed  the  Humber  into  Lincolnshire,  burnt  the  rich 
monastery  at  Bardenay  and  put  its  occupants  to  the  sword.     A  small 
army  of  Saxons  in  the  district  of  Kestevan  stopped  their  progress  for 
one  day,  however,  killing  three  of  the   Danish  chieftains,  but  soon  the 
victorious  invaders  were  sweeping  on  to  the  monastery  of  Croyland. 
Oskytue,  a  Danish  leader,  forced  open  the  gates,  and  beheaded  the  abbot 
on  the  steps  of  the  alter.     Having  pillaged  and  burnt  the  monastery, 
they  marched  to  Medeshampsted,  where  the  inhabitants  resisted  them 
stoutly  and  wounded  Hingua.     Soon  the  gates  gave  way  and  the  blood- 
thirsty Danes  slaughtered  all  whom  they  found,  not  sparing  it  is  said 
women  and  children  who  had  sought  refuge  in  the  abbey.     HUBBA,  to 
avenge  his  wounded  brother,  slew  with  his  own  hand  the    abbot   and 
eighty-four  monks.     From  the  ashes  of  Medeshampsted  they  proceeded 
on  to  Huntington,  destroying  it,  and  then  took  the  Isle  of  Ely.     The 
nuns  in  this  monastery  were  descended  from  noble  Saxon  families,  and 
yet  escaped  not  the  cruelty  and  lust  of  these  barbarous  invaders.     The 
King  of  Mercia,  St.  Edmund,  was  captured  at  Hoxon-on-the-Waveney, 
bound  naked  to'a  tree,  and,  at  HUBBA'S  command,  was  whipped  and 
otherwise  tortured  and  finally  beheaded.     They  met  King  Ethelred  and 
Alfred  the  Great  at  Excesdune  [AstonJ,  and  after  a  terrific  battle  were 
routed  and  in  confusion  fled  as  far  as  Reading.     Bacseg,  a  Danish  King, 
the  jarls  Osburn,  Frean,  Harold,  and  the  two  Sidrocs  were  killed.      "  A 
solitary  thorn  tree  points  out  the  spot  on  which  the  Danes  were  de- 


Landing  of  Hubba  and  Hingua  on  the  Coast  of  Northumbria  in  866. 


Born  where  the  ice-king  reigns  supreme 
Nursed  by  his  frosty  breath. 
No  power  below  could  stav  their  course. 
No  power  above  but  death: 

Bequeathed  to  us  this  heritage. 
That  from  these  Norsemen  came: 
Our  inborn  love  of  liberty: 
Our  proud,  historic  name!— 

John  Merwih  Hubbard. 


Cycles  of  time  rolled  round  and  round. 
Year  on  year  rolled  on: 
Their  children's  children  sought  the  land 
Where  rose  the  freeman's  sun. 


ftdMngton  /flfanor, 
9fflmsloto. 

^<n**J~^  <tf¥c*/x^  P/faJ^^  ^  A*4Z» 


i   Letter  from  Rt.  Hon.  John  Gellibrand 


^^^t^- 


(5^^**^   Z^1^?  fa&yis  Oypvr-  C^^a^t^  <&tf 


tKSZsC 


*  #£/£^c<r$^rL4-*r'   ^fee^t^u^  ^A*v^&r^ZcUL  <£**-^^**<^ 
Z^*-     *Uc<f<.  j^r-^vunz^  ^u-t^    -WlZ,  /C*s-      r/utot^    *iA*~-- 

Hubbard,  London,  to  James  Hubard  of  Virginia. 


24  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

feated."  Other  battles  were  afterward  fought  at  Basing  and  Morton, 
in  Berkshire,  in  which  the  Danes  were  victorious,  they  having-  received 
fresh  reinforcements  from  the  Baltic.  Ethelred  was  killed,  and  then 
the  invaders  returned  to  Reading-  to  divide  their  spoils  and  rejoice  in 
the  glory  of  their  conquests. 

In  878  Hingua  and  HUBBA  with  a  fleet  of  23  ships  "ravaged  the 
coasts  of  Demetia  or  South  Wales,  and,  crossing  to  the  northern  coast  of 
Devonshire,  the  sanguinous  HUBBA  landed  his  troops  in  the  vicinity  of 
Apledore.  It  appears  as  if  the  two  brothers  had  previously  agreed  to 
crush  the  king  [Alfred]  between  the  pressure  of  their  respective  armies. 

At  the  castle  of  Kynwith,  built  upon  an  almost  impregnable  rock, 
Odun,*  the  Saxon  leader,  took  his  position.  The  Danish  leader  [HUBBA] 
was  too  wary  to  hazard  an  assault,  and  calmly  pitched  his  tents  at  the 
foot  of  the  mountain  in  the  confident  expectation  that  the  want  of  water 
would  force  the  garrison  to  surrender.  But  Odun,  gathering  courage 
from  despair,  silently  left  his  entrenchments  at  the  dawn  of  morning, 
burst  into  HUBBA'S  camp,  slew  him,  with  twelve  hundred  of  his  fol- 
lowers, and  then  drove  the  remnant  of  the  routed  army  to  their  fleet. 
Odun  captured  HUBBA'S  lucky  battle-flag,  the  mysterious  standard  of 
Ragner,  the  "  Reafan,"  [raven]  which  was  "woven  in  one  noon-tide  by 
thehands  of  the  three  daughters  of  Ragner."  The  superstition  of  the 
Danes  had  accustomed  them  to  watch  this  bird  on  their  standard  as  they 
marched  to  battle.  If  it  appeared  to  flap  its  wings,  victory  was  certain, 
but  if  it  hung  motionless  in  the  air  they  anticipated  nothing  but  defeat. 

Thus  perished  HUBBA,  and  also  for  a  long  time  the  martial  fire  that 
burned  within  the  breasts  of  the  adventurous  Danes,  though  Hingua  after- 
ward invaded  Ireland,  but  was  killed  there,  while  Half  dene  and  Gothrun, 
the  successors  of  Hingua  and  HUBBA,  made  a  very  creditable  stand 
against  Alfred  the  Great  at  Ethandune.  Gothrun  was  captured  by  King 
Alfred,  but  was  permitted  to  live  on  the  condition  of  his  embracing 
Christianity,  which  he  accepted,  and,  with  thirty  of  his  followers,  was 
baptised  at  Aulre,  Alfred  being  Gothrun 's  god-father.  They  jointly 
signed  a  compact  wherein  it  was  declared  that  "the  lives  of  Englishmen 
and  Danes  were  of  equal  value."  It  is  not  related  what  became  of  Half- 
dene  [Half dan  or  Half dane],  possibly  the  brother  of  Hingua  and  HUBBA. 
"The  Hinguas,"  "the  Gothruns,"  and  "the  HUBBA'S,"  then  in  the 
main  adopted  the  names  of  their  kings,  with  the  habits  of  civilization, 
and,  acquiring  an  interest  in  the  soil,  helped  the  Britains  to  protect  it 
against  subsequent  marauding  invaders;  and  sometimes  these  unwel- 
come visitors  were  their  own  erstwhile  countrymen,  but  their  allegiance 
to  their  adopted  country  was  true,  and  they  became  during  Britain's 

*  Also  spelled  Odin  and  Oddune. 


ORIGIN  OF  THE  NAME  HUBBARD.  25 

rapid  advancement  toward  commercial  and  agricultural  supremacy,  her 
most  skilled  and  reliable  husbandmen. 

The  rapid  and  extensive  movements  of  HUBBA  over  the  territory  now 
England  and  Wales,  and  his  penchant  for  encamping  upon  and  fortify- 
ing high  places,  has  been  of  great  value  to  the  historical  and  archaeo- 
logical student,  leaving  as  he  did  indubitable  traces  of  his  remarkable 
marches.  Throughout  Britain  and  Wales  have  existed  seven  historic 
eminences  that  have  borne  the  name  of  "  Hubba's  Hill."  The  picture 
of  one  spot  has  been  happily  preserved,  though  not  located  upon  an 
eminence.  Francis  Grose,  Esq.,  F.  A.  S.,  in  his  "Antiquities  of  England 
and  Wales,"  thus  refers  to  a  spot  known  as  "  Hubba  Stone  Priory"  (also 
Hubberston,  or  Hubbaston),  and  gives,  with  the  foregoing  inscription 
underneath,  in  the  work,  an  illustration  of  it:  "The  ruin  stands  in  Pem- 
brokeshire, not  far  from  Milford  Haven,  and  is  called  by  the  inhabitants 
the  priory;  but  whether  for  monks  or  nuns,  or  what  order,  and  when 

and  by  whom  founded,  are  par- 
ticulars not  handed  down  by 
tradition,  or,  at  least,  not  known 
by  the  generality  of  the  neigh- 
boring people.  The  building 
here  shown  seems  to  have  been 
part  of  the  gatehouse,  in  all 
likelihood  the  principal  one  be- 
longing to  the  monastery.  This 
view  was  drawn  by  Air.  Grimm 
anno  1 77 1." 
hubba  stone  priory  *  Mr    Walter    Hubbell,    in   his 

"  History  of  the  Hubbell  Family,"  infers  that  this,  family  might  also 
have  descended  from  Hubba  the  Dane,  making  still  another  addition  to 
the  long  list  of  names  that  had  for  their  root  "  Hubba."  He  quotes 
Rev.  William  Arthur,  father  of  the  late  lamented  ex-President  Chester 
Alan  Arthur,  as  saying  in  his  "  Etymological  Dictionary  of  Family 
Names  "  that  it  had  this  origin,  and  surmises  that  Hubbell  came  from 
Hubba's  Hill  perhaps,  rendered  "  Hubb'll  "  by  local  pronunciation.  In 
his  preface  Mr.  Hubbell  says:  "For  me  to  assert  that  the  early  members 
of  the  Hubbell  Family  were  lineal  descendants  of  Hubba  the  Dane 
would  be  supposititious;  but  I  do  say,  and  without  fear  of  contradiction, 
that  the  surname  Hubbell  is  of  Danish  origin."  He  claims  no  kinship 
with  the  Hubbard  Family,  and  the  compiler  found  no  proof  either  of 
any  affinity  with  it,  though  the  word  Hubba  could  easily  have  been  the 
common  root  of  both. 

*  From  an  etching  in  Grose's  "Antiquities  of  England  and  Wales." 


26  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

Referring-  to  Francis  Grose's  account  of  Hubba  Stone  Priory,  Mr. 
Hubbell  says  further:  "  It  is  most  probable  that  the  ruin  thus  described 
was  never  erected  nor  used  as  a  priory,  but  was  the  remains  of  a  fortress 
or  castle  erected  and  inhabited  by  Hubba;  for  his  last  permanent  forti- 
fication is  known  to  have  been  near  Milford-Haven,  where  his  fleet 
harbored  and  whence  he  crossed  the  channel,  landed  from  his  twenty- 
three  ships  in  Devonshire,  England,  where  he  was  slain  in  battle.  From 
the  vast  amount  of  historical  research  I  have  made  in  regard  to  this 
subject,  I  have  been  led  to  believe  that  several  hills  in  Britain  upon 
which  he  and  his  band  had  previously  encamped  afterwards  bore  his 
name.  The  name  Hubba  is  not  only  very  ancient  in  British  historv,  but 
probably  of  great  antiquity  in  Asia.*  *  *  Mr.  Hormuzd  Rassam 
paid  a  visit  to  the  mounds  called  by  the  Arabs  Tell  Abu  Hubba;  the 
mounds,  which  are  very  extensive,  cover  an  area  of  two  miles  in  circum- 
ference, and  the  position  of  the  walls  and  citadels  is  clearly  marked  by 
mounds  and  embankments  of  debris.  Like  most  Babylonian  edifices, 
the  buildings  at  Abu  Hubba  are  built  with  the  angles  to  the  cardinal 
points  [here  follows  a  full  description  of  the  citadel  and  its  environ- 
ments]. *  *  *  The  remote  ancestors  of  Hubba  the  Dane  came  from 
Asia,  and  it  is  more  than  probable  from  the  very  valley  where  the 
ruins — beneath  the  mounds  of  Abu  Hubba — were  discovered.  Now,  as 
personal  names  are  handed  down  for  centuries,  why  may  not  the  name 
Hubba  have  been  used  by  the  remote  ancestors  of  the  chieftain  in  Asia? 
The  very  fact  of  the  existence  of  the  name  in  Asia  at  the  present  day 
indicates  to  my  mind  that  it  is  of  an  antiquity  probably  as  great  as  the 
ruins  discovered  beneath  the  mounds." 

In  a  historical  account  of  Whitby  Abbey,  Yorkshire,  England,  the  sub- 
ject is  thus  touched  upon:  "  This  monastery  continued  in  a  flourishing 
state  until  about  the  year  867,  when  a  party  of  Danes  under  Hubba  and 
Hingua  landed  at  Dunesley  Bay,  two  miles  westward  of  this  place,  and 
encamped  on  an  eminence  on  the  east  side  thereof,  still  called  Raven's 
Hill,  which  name  it  is  supposed  to  have  been  obtained  from  the  figure  of 
that  bird  being  worked  on  the  Danish  ensign  which  was  there  displayed. 
From  thence,  straggling  into  the  country,  they  plundered  and  laid  it 
waste,  and  among  other  depredations  entirely  destroyed  this  monastery, 
which  lay  in  ruins  for  many  years.  The  community  being  dispersed, 
only  Titus,  the  abbot,  fled  with  the  relics  of  St.  Hilda  to  Glastonbury.* 

"Old  English  History  "  and  David  Hume  also  relate  much  of  him. 
The  following  is  another  extract:  "In  871  Hubba  and  Hingua  took  St. 
Edmund,f  the  King,  prisoner  at  Thetford,  in  East  Anglia.     They  offered 

*  The  reputed  birthplace  of  George  Hubbard,  the  American  emigrant. 

t  Percy  Lindley,  in  his  "Holidays  in  England,"  records  that  "St.  Edmund,  the  last  King  of  the  East 


ORIGIN  OF  THE  NAME  HUBBARD. 


■7 


him  his  life  and  kingdom  if  he  would  forsake  Christianity  and  reign 
under  them,  When  he  refused  they  tied  him  to  a  tree  and  shot  at  him 
with  arrows,  and  at  last  cut  off  his  head.  In  the  churches  at  Norfolk 
and  Suffolk  are  to  be  seen  pictures  of  him  pierced  with  arrows.  The 
Danes  at  the  same  time  killed  Humberht,  Bishop  of  the  East  Angles, 
and  after  ravaging  the  country  and  burning  the  churches  and  monas- 
teries, they  went  into  Mercia  and  carried  on  their  depredations." 

The  compiler  in  his  researches  has  been  often  amazed  at  the  number 
of  grotesque  mutations  the  name  HUBBARD  has  undergone,  fully 
equaling  the  number  of  ways  the  name  "  Shakespeare "  has  been 
spelled,  which  it  is  said  overruns  fifty.  He  has  seen  it  spelled  Hobbert, 
Hobart,  Hubert,  Hubard,  Hobard,  Hobbard,  Hubord,  Hubberte,  Hu- 
bart,  Hobbart,  Ouabert  [French  Canadian],  Hubba,  Hubb,  Ubba, 
Ubbart,  Ubbo,  Hoberd,  Huberd,  Hobert,  Hubbar,  Hubber,  Hubbud, 
Hubburd,  Hubud,  Horberd,  Horburd,  Horbert,  Hobbud,  Hebbard, 
Hoebard,  Hubbed,  Hobbed,  Hubed,  Hobbar,  Herbut,  Herbeord,  Hobood, 
Haburd,  Hubird,  Hobat,  Hubbirt,  Hubirt,  Hobbet,  Harburd,  Hebberd, 
Heburd,  Habberd,  Hoppert,  Harbard,  Hapberd,  Herbert  and  Happert. 

There  are  many  descendants  in  this  country  who  use  the  common 
form  of  Hubbart,  Hubert,  Hubbert,  Hobert,  Hobard  and  Hubard.  The 
writer  holds  to  the  theory  that  HUBBA  is  the  root  of  these  multiform 
corruptions,  though  some  other  descendants  incline  to  the  contrary 
opinion.  There  was  dense  confusion  in  spelling  names  in  the  fifteenth 
century,  the  orthography  being  then  very  loose.  Surnames  only  began 
to  be  adopted  after  the  Norman  Conquest  (1066),  and  then  only  grad- 
ually and  by  families  of  rank.  Almost  all  parish  and  legal  records  were 
written  in  Latin  from  the  eleventh  to  the  sixteenth  century,  which 
created  great  difficulty  in  furnishing  the  correct  translation  of  proper 
names.  Early  town  scribes  in  this  country  wrote  the  name  as  fancy 
guided  them,  totally  indifferent  to  the  perplexity  they  were  surely 
entailing  upon  an  enquiring  posterity.  The  writer  saw  in  an  old  town 
record  the  name  HUBBARD  (referring  to  one  individual  only),  spelled 
in  four  different  ways.  With  such  indubitable  proofs  of  this  system  of 
variform  orthography  in  the  early  days  it  is  taking  an  indefensible  posi- 
tion to  insist  upon  the  unimpeachibility  of  any  of  these  names  regard- 
ing their  purity  of  origin. 

Angles,  who  was  defeated  and  slain  by  the  Danes,  is  commemorated  by  a  church  dedicated  to  him, 
which  was  celebrated  for  possessing  a  fragment  of  the  martyr's  underlinen  that  wrought  miracles 
till  such  ecclesiastical  properties  were  committed  to  the  flames  at  the  Reformation.  'Norwich 'is 
Norse,  say  philologists  ;  and  the  physical  characteristics  and  names  of  many  of  its  inhabitants  prove 
the  former  predominance  of  the  Scandinavian  element.  Under  ^Ethelstan  and  his  immediate  suc- 
cessors Norwich  flourished  and  grew  wealthy,  only  to  be  destroyed  and  plundered  by  the  Danes,  in 
the  days  of  iEthelred  the  Unready."  Norwich  stands  at  the  head  of  a  fine  natural  harbor  in  Norfolk 
that  was  used  in  early  days  by  the  Angles,  Danes  and  Normans.  Wymondham  Parish,  but  a  short 
distance  from  Norwich,  contains  in  its  various  church  registers  many  Hubbard  genealogical  records. 


^Tfl?MAj '/1U3BARP  STCALA/f^ 


28 


Coats  °^  arms. 


It  is  far  from  my  design  to  intimate  that  Heraldry  can  have  any  tendency  unfriendly  to  the 
purest  spirit  of  Republicanism— George  Washington. 


AMONG  Hubbard  descendants  the  compiler  has  found  considerable 
confusion  and  a  misty  knowledge  generally  about  the  HUBBARD 
COATS  OF  ARMS,  especially  as  to  which  was  the  correct  coat.  To 
dispel  this  fog  and  settle  beyond  peradventure  some  conflicting  opin- 
ions, the  writer  obtained  from  the  Herald's  College,  London,  its  regis- 
tered data  covering  this  much  misunderstood  matter,  which  he  presents 
herewith  under  the  seal  of  universally  acknowledged  authority. 

To  start  with,  it  is  well  to  say  that  in  early  periods  in  England 
various  grants  of  arms  have  been  awarded  to  "Hubbards,"  "  Hubbarts," 
"Hobarts,"  "  Hubberts,"  "Huberts,"  "  Hubarts,"  and  "  Hubberds,"  and 
all  are  correct,  being  grants  made  at  different  times  to  collateral 
branches  of  the  HUBBARD  tree  trunk.  The  four  leading  coats  only, 
as  furnished  by  the  Herald's  College,  are  herein  illustrated,  though 
others  mentioned  in  Burke's  "  Encyclopedia  of  Heraldry  "  are  herewith 
described. 

There  being  founded  in  law  or  sentiment  no  college  of  arms  in  this 
country,  or  in  existence  any  statutes  recognizing  such  an  institution  of 
symbolism  as  "  Heraldry,"  any  Hubbard  descendant  is  privileged  to 
appropriate  any  Hubbard  heraldic  device  to  his  own  iise — or  any  other 
armorial  design  for  that  matter — should  the  fancy  so  seize  him,  though 
a  consideration  for  the  ethics  of  propriety  would  doubtless  forbid 
choosing  the  latter  course.  Such  liberties  could  not  under  any  circum- 
stances be  taken  in  foreign  countries,  where  these  rights  are  proprietary 
and  inviolate.  Persons  unable  to  prove  descent  from  the  original 
grantee  are  punished  there  for  assuming  armorial  bearings  illegally. 
In  the  United  States  "  Heraldry  "  has  no  legal  status. 

The  graceful  art  of  heraldry  began  to  show  distinctive  signs  of  exist- 
29 


GrmfeMy&WSto 

tPHMPP  W8BARP 

of '  BUPCttANGEf?.  ENGLANP. 


3° 


HISTORY  OF  HUBBARD   COATS   OF  ARMS.  M 

ence  a  little  later  than  the  beginning  of  the  eleventh  century.  Its 
parentage  comes  from  out  of  a  cloud  of  fantastical  romance  interwoven 
with  various  superstitious  skeins  of  allegorical  entity. 

One  account  of  its  origin  says  that  in  1098  the  Christians  being  near 
Antioch,  and  the  night  waxing  dark,  to  give  them  safety  there  appeared 
a  white  star,  or  "  mulette,"  of  five  points,  which  "to  every  man's  sighte 
did  lighte  and  arreste  upon  the  standard  of  De  Vere,  there  shvning 
excessively."  Hence  the  De  Veres  adopted  upon  their  "escutcheon" 
(from  "  scutum  " — a  leather  covering)  five  stars. 

In  Sir  John  Froissart's  Chronicles  is  given  another  version  of  its 
inception.  It  declares  that  the  "  Kynge  of  France  "  had  a  bright 
"visyon  on  a  night  as  he  lay  in  his  bedde  asleepe  of  a  flyeing  Hart," 
which  "  pleased  hym  so  moche  that  when  he  went  into  Flanders  to  fight 
with  the  Flemynges  he  took  to  his  devyse  the  flyeing  Harte." 

Another  writer  says  that  it  originated  in  Germany  about  10 10,  and 
cites  the  reclining  figure  of  a  certain  Varmond,  Count  of  Vasserburg,  on 
a  monument  in  the  church  of  St.  Emmeran,  at  Ratisbon,  Anno  Domini 
MX.,  as  the  oldest  symbolic  evidence  in  existence  of  architectural 
heraldry.  It  may  have  originated  there,  but  it  certainly  developed  in 
France,  and  at  once  engrafted  itself  upon  the  body-politic  of  Great 
Britain.  It  rose  in  importance  and  assumed  great  proportions  during 
the  Crusades.  Every  soldier's  commander  was  distinguishable  by  the 
devices  worn  upon  his  "banneret  "  and  shield.  In  tournaments  a 
knight's  identity  was  thus  discovered,  and  when  he  championed  the 
cause  of  one  or  more  ladies,  their  insignia  was  also  borne  upon  his 
shield  in  half  or  quartered  sections,  which  were  called  "  fields."  In 
medieval  times  the  armorial  designs  represented  valorous  achieve- 
ments, the  descent  of  hereditary  honors,  or  distinctions  appertaining  to 
nobility,  and  counterfeiting  these  designs  brought  severe  penalties.  In 
later  periods  the  dignity  of  these  devices  became  somewhat  debased  by 
appearing  upon  windows,  tombstones,  carriages,  rings,  tilings,  family 
plate,  and  other  household  decorations.  It  is  claimed  with  some  force 
of  plausibility  that  the  heat  of  the  sun  was  the  direct  cause  of  the  "  cote 
armure  "  (coat  over  armor).  The  heat  and  glare  was  often  intolerable 
to  the  soldier  or  knight,  and  a  "coat  "  or  "habit  "  became  a  necessity 
and  the  devices  or  "  charges  "  were  then  transferred  to  the  "  coat." 

The  grant  of  the  coat  of  arms  shown  in  one  of  the  illustrations  was 
made  in  the  time  of  King  Henry  VII,  who  reigned  from  14S5  to  1509. 
This  coat  was  granted  to  "THOMAS  HUBBARD,  of  Calais,"  which 
garrisoned  and  fortified  city  was  then  under  English  domination  and  so 
remained  until  1558,  and  which  James  Anthony  Froude,  the  English 
historian,  called  a  "  rendezvous  for  malcontents." 


'//?  J°A/Y  Gf-LL  /BQAMP /1UBBAPP,  < 

34J?e/Y,  MA  MP  P/P£CT°P- 

Gf/vepal  sf  the  Bank  sfBnola/vp. 


3  2 


HISTORY  OF  HUBBARD  COATS   OF  ARMS. 

The  honor  was  conferred  upon  THOMAS  HUBBARD  by  Sir 
Christopher  Barker,  the  Garter  King-  of  Arms  at  that  time  of  the  Her- 
ald's College,  who  was  also  the  official  confidential  agent  of  royalty  and 
invested  with  power  to  go  abroad  and  confer  titles  and  ofttimes  adjust 
royal  marriage  preliminaries  and  negotiations.  The  officials  of  the  Col- 
lege of  Arms  are  the  Earl  Marshal  (hereditary  through  line  of  Duke  of 
Norfolk),  the  Clarencieux  King,  Norroy  King,  Garter  King,  six  Heralds, 
and  four  Royal  Pursuivants.  THOMAS  HUBBARD  was  said  to  have 
been  one  of  King  Henry's  soldiers. 

The  Herald's  College  thus  describes  this  Coat: 

The  Arms  granted  are:  Azure— a  chevron  between  three  swans'  heads  erased  (argent);  each 
gorged  with  a  crown  (ur  and  gules).  *  No  crest  is  recorded,  and  neither  No.  I  nor  No  II  have  anv 
motto. 

The  Herald's  College  describes  still  another  Coat  in  the  accompany- 
ing illustrations,  in  the  following  language : 

This  Coat  was  granted  by  Sir  Gilbert  Dethick  [who  succeeded  Sir  Christopher  Barker  to  that  title 
Aprd  20,  1550,  upon  the  death  of  Sir  Christopher]  May  19.  1575,  in  the  17th  year  of  Queen  Elizabeth's 
reign,  to  EDWARD  HUBBARD,  of  Burchanger,  Essex  County,  Gentleman,  one  of  the  six  Clerks  of 
the  High  Court  of  Chancery,  son  and  heir  of  Richard  Hubbard,  son  and  heir  of  John  Hubbard  citizen 
and  mercer  of  London. 

The  Arms  granted  are:  Quarterly— argent  and  sable;  on  a  bend  (gules)  three  lions  (or)  passant. 
*  No  crest  is  recorded . 

OTHER  GRANTS  MENTIONED  IN  BURKE'S  ENCYCLOPEDIA  OF  HERALDRY. 

HUBBARD — (of  Durham).  Arms:  {sable)  in  chief  a  crescent 
(argent),  and  in  base  an  estoile  of  eight  points  (or)  between  two 
flanches  (ermine).     Crest:  A  wolf  passant  (or). 

HUBBARD— (or  Hubert).  Arms:  Per  cross  (argent  and  sable) ;  on 
a  bend  (gules)  three  lions  rampant  (or). 

HUBBARD.  Arms:  (vert)  a  chevron  between  three  eagles'  heads 
erased  (argent),  ducally  gorged  (gules). 

HUBBERT— (Cork,  Ireland,  and  Island  of  Teneriffe).  Arms:  (azure) 
a  talbot  (argent).     Crest:  A  boar's  head  (sable). 

HUBERT — (Burge,  County  Kent).     Lozengy  (gules  and  vair). 

HUBERT— (Sunbury,  County  Middlesex).  Quarterly  (or  and  sable); 
on  a  bend  (gules)  three  lions  rampant,  of  the  first.  Crest:  On  a  chapeau 
(gules),  turned  up  (ermine),  a  lion's  head  erased  (or),  charged  with  three 
estoiles  in  fesse,  of  the  first. 

EXPLANATORY    NOTE. 

Or— gold;  argent— silver:  gules— red:  azure— blue;  vert-green;  sable— black;  ermine— fur:  vair— 
squirrel  fur  Quarterly-shield  divided  into  four  equal  parts:  on  a  bend-a  wide  band  extending 
across  shield  horizontally  from  right  upper  corner  to  left  lower  corner;  chevron— upper  half  of  hollow 
diamond  horizontally  divided;  erased— torn  off;  rampant— rearing  on  hind  legs;  passant— walking- 
estoile— star  of  over  five  waving  points:  talbot— hunting  dog  with  lopped  ears  and  thick  snout:  in 
tesse— horizontally  arranged:  in  chief— in  a  wide  band  extending  across  upper  part  of  shield:  in  base- 
in  wide  band  at  bottom  of  shield:  lozengy— diamond  shaped,  but  elongated:  flanches— wide  baud 
with  concave  lines;  charged— decorated;  ducal lv  gorged— crowned  about  the  neck. 


*  Though  the  College  has  no  record  of  the  crests  and  mottoes  adorning  the  accompanying  illus- 
trations, that  does  not  signify  that  they  have  been  unlawfully  acquired.  These  appendages  are  of 
subordinate  importance  anyway,  and  in  some  manner  unknown  have  escaped  registration  ■  yet  it 
has  seemed  proper  to  display  them  in  the  illustrations,  because  (1)  the  escutcheons  would  look' barren 
and  incomplete  without  them,  and  (2)  because  the  titled  Hubbards  of  Europe  are  now  using  them 
and  have  been,  for  over  200  years  at  the  least. 


/     < 


Durham,  England. 


34 


NORWICH    CATHEDRAL,    NORFOLK,    ENGLAND. 

Exterior  an  1  Interior  Views.    The  Churches  of  Norfolk  anrl  Suffolk  contain  Pictures  of  Kins  Hubba 
Beheading  St.  Edmund,  King  of  the  East  Angles. 


35 


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36 


ii  mxm\miiiiTr///i/s//srsss/S/S/&7/2££%j?2Z£, 


PROJAINENT  ENGLISH 

HUBBARDSalHOBARTS^ 


His  eyen  twinkeled  in  his  hed  aright,  as  don  the  sterres  in  a  frosty  night  this  worthy  limitour  was 
cleped  Huberd— "  The  Friar,"  in  Canterbury  Tales. 


The  ensuing  narrations  have  been  chiefly  furnished  to  the  compiler  by  a  "  professional  searcher," 
who  was  highly  recommended  to  him  by  the  British  Museum,  and  should  be  fairly  accurate  in  details 
so  far  as  the  transcription  of  records  goes. 

After  the  death  of  King  HLBBA  by  Odun  in  878  HLBB.VS  descendants  populated  Eastern  and 
Southeastern  England  from  the  river  Humber  down  to  the  English  Channel,  comprising  mainly  Lin 
colnshire,  Rutland,  Cambridge,  Norfolk,  Suffolk,  Essex,  and  Kent.  They  engaged  principally  in  agri- 
culture, horticulture  and  floriculture,  and  their  doings  to  the  historical  ferret  remain  hidden  up  to 
about  the  thirteenth  century. 

JOHN  HUBBARD  was  born  about   1235,  and  lived  in  Tye,  Norfolk. 
(The  name  is  also  spelled    Hoberd,    Huberd,  and    Hobart).     No 
record  of  his  death. 

THOMAS  HUBBARD  (name  also  spelled  Hoberd  and  Hobart),  a 
descendant  and  heir  of  John,  was  born  between  1400  and  1425,  and 
lived  at  Leyham,  Norfolk.  No  record  of  his  death.  He  left  sons 
James  and  William. 

Sir  TAMES  HUBBARD  (name  also  spelled  Hoberd  and  Hobart),  was 
the  youngest  son  of  Thomas  Hubbard  (Hoberd  or  Hobart)  of  Leyham, 
Norfolk,  and  was  born  about  1425.  He  represented  in  Parliament  in 
1467  and  1478  Ipswich,  Norfolk,  after  having  become  a  member  of  the 
bar  at  Lincoln's  Inn  during-  the  time  of  King  Henry  VII.  He  was  one 
of  the  Governors  of  this  famed  law  school  from  1479  to  x5°3-  Novem- 
ber 1,  i486,  he  was  created  Attorney-General  of  England  by  King 
Henry  VII,  and  soon  thereafter  sworn  of  the  privy  council.  He  ren- 
dered'  good  service  to  his  sovereign  during  the-  coast  fisheries  difficulty 
in  November  of  1487,  and  was  knighted  February  18,  1502-3.  His  first 
wife  was  a  sister  of  John  Lyhert,  and  he  was  the  first  Hubbard  to  settle 
in  Norfolk.  His  third  wife  was  Margeret,  daughter  of  Peter  Naunton, 
Letheringham,  Suffolk.  Sir  JAMES  died  according  to  some  authorities 
in  1507  and  was  buried  in  Norwich  Cathedral.  Other  authorities  claim 
37 


38  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

he  was  alive  in  1511,  and  upon  death  was  buried  at  Loddon,  Norfolk, 
where  his  wife  Margaret  was  buried  in  1484  and  where  he  founded  a 
church.  Sir  JAMES  bought  and  resided  at  Hales  Hall,  and  by  his  wife 
Margaret  had  a  son,  Sir  Walter,  and  perhaps  other  children. 

WILLIAM  HUBBARD,  son  of  Thomas  of  Leyham  and  brother  to 
Sir  James,  was  born  about  1420.  He  left  a  son  Miles  and  probably 
other  children.     No  record  of  his  death. 

MILES  *  HOBART,  a  descendant  of  William,  was  born  about  1550, 
and  resided  at  Plumstead,  Norfolk,  and  also  in  London.  He  married 
Eleanor  Blaverhasset,  daughter  of  John,  and  left  sons  Sir  Miles,  John 
and  Thomas. 

Sir  WALTER  HOBART,  eldest  son  of  Sir  James,  was  born  about 
1480  at  Hales  Hall,  Norfolk,  and  married  Anne  Haydon,  daughter  of 
Henry  Haydon.  At  her  death  he  married  Ann  Ratcliffe,  daughter  of 
John  Ratcliffe,  Lord  Fitz  Walter,  of  Morley,  Norfolk.  Sir  WALTER 
was  high  Sheriff  of  Norfolk  and  Suffolk  in  1535-36. 

THOMAS  HOBART,  son  of  Sir  Miles,  married  Audrey  Hare,  daugh- 
ter of  William  Hare,  of  Beeston,  Norfolk,  and  left  a  son  Henry. 

JOHN  HOBART,  son  of  Sir  Miles,  married  Anne  Tilney,  daughter 
of  Philip,  of  Wayte,  Norfolk. 

Sir  MILES  HOBART,  son  of  Sir  Miles  and  Elizabeth,  his  third  wife, 
was  born  April  14,  1595,  at  Plumstead,  Norfolk,  and  was  knighted  at 
Salisbury,  August  8,  1623,  and  elected  Member  of  Parliament  in  1627 
from  Great  Marlow,  Buckinghamshire.  He  became  a  famous  politician, 
and  March  2,  1628-9,  during  an  exciting  and  memorable  debate  in  Par- 
liament he  locked  the  door  to  prevent  some  timid  members  from  leaving 
and  forcibly  held  the  Speaker  in  his  chair  until  a  favorite  measure  of 
his  could  be  passed.  For  this  with  Sirs  Peter  Heymen,  Selden,  Coriton, 
Long  and  Strode  he  was  imprisoned  in  the  "  Kings  Bench  "  and  from 
there  taken  to  the  Tower  and  kept  until  1631.  He  married  Susan  Pey- 
ton, daughter  of  Johr,  Baronet,  of  Isleham,  Cambridge,  and  had  chil- 
dren Sir  John  and  Alice.  June  29,  1632,  he  was  killed  by  the  overturning 
of  his  coach,  and  was  buried  at  Great  Marlow,  July  4,  1634.  January  18, 
1646-7,  Parliament  voted  ^5,000  to  erect  a  momiment  to  his  memory  as  a 
testimonial  to  his  virtues  in  opposing  illegal  and  harmful  measures 
while  a  member  of  Parliament. 

Sir  HENRY  HOBART,  son  of  Thomas  of  Plumstead,  was  born  prob- 
ably before  1550.     He  became  a  member  of  Lincoln's   Inn  August   10, 

*  The  name  now  is  chronicled  "  Hobart."  and  will  be  so  treated  The  parish  registers,  however,  of 
Norwich,  continued  to  carry  many  of  these  branches  as  "Hubbards,"as  does  the  register  at  Wymond- 
ham,  Norfolk,  which  has  recorded  there  "Thomas  Hubbard"  and  "Caleb  Hubbard,"  the  son  and 
grandson  respectively,  of  Edmund  Hobart,  of  Hingham,  the  American  emigrant. 


PROMINENT  ENGLISH  HUB  BARDS  AND  HOB  ARTS.    39 

1575,  called  to  the  bar  June  24,  1584,  Governor  of  the  Inn  in  1591,  Mem- 
ber of  Parliament  for  St.  Ives,  Cornwall,  in  1588-9,  and  for  Yarmouth, 
Siiffolk,  in  1597-1601,  and  Norwich,  Suffolk,  from  1604  to  1610.  July  4, 
1606,  he  became  his  Majesty's  Attorney-General,  barring  Lord  Bacon's 
way  to  promotion  for  seven  years,  much  to  Bacon's  great  annoyance. 
He  was  Chancellor  to  Henry,  Prince  of  Wales,  and  created  a  Baronet  in 
May,  161 1.  November  26,  1613,  he  was  constituted  Lord  Chief  Justice 
of  the  Common  Pleas,  and  known  as  a  most  learned,  prudent,  grave, 
and  religious  Judge.  In  16 17  he  was  Chancellor  and  Keeper  of  the 
Great  Seal  of  Charles,  Prince  of  Wales.  He  married  April  22,  1590, 
Dorothy  Bell,  daughter  of  Robert,  of  Beaupre  Hall,  Norfolk,  Lord 
Chief  Baron  of  the  exchequer  under  Queen  Elizabeth.  By  her  he  had 
twelve  sons  and  four  daughters,  of  which  nine  of  the  sons  died  young, 
leaving  Sir  John,  Baronet  (who  succeeded  his  father),  and  Henry, 
the  daughters  being  Dorothy,  Mary,  Elizabeth,  and  Francis. 
He  died  December  26,  1625,  and  was  buried  in  Christ  Church,  Norwich, 
Norfolk.     He  was  "  a  great  loss  to  the  public  weal." 

Sir  JOHN  HOBART,  eldest  son  of  Sir  Henry  and  Dorothy  (Bell) 
Hobart,  was  born  April  19,  1593,  at  Norwich:  knighted  at  ten  years  of 
age,  and  made  a  Baronet  at  32.  He  lived  at  Blickling,  Norfolk,  and  also 
acquired  Plumstead  from  his  cousin  Sir  Thomas.  He  represented  Corf-' 
Castle,  Dorsetshire,  in  1603:  also  Lestwithiel,  Cornwall,  and  Thetford  in 
1625:  also  the  county  of  Norfolk  in  1641.  He  married  Lady  Philippa 
Sidney,  fourth  daughter  of  Sir  Robert,  Earl  of  Leicester.  She  was  born 
in  1594,  and  was  reputed  to  have  been  a  Maid  of  Honor  to  Anne  of  Den-„ 
mark,  Queen  to  James  I.  She  died  in  September,  1620,  leaving  a  daugh- 
ter, Dorothy.  After  her  death,  Sir  John  married  Lady  Francis 
Edgerton,  eldest  of  the  eight  daughters  of  the  Earl  of  Bridgewater,  Sir 
John  Edgerton.  She  was  born  in  1603,  and  died  in  1664,  leaving  one 
daughter.  Lady  Francis  was  a  noble  and  pious  woman  of  beautiful 
character,  one  whom  her  chaplain,  Dr.  Collinges,  loved  to  describe  as 
possessing  nearly  every  virtue  "  and  of  such  a  prayerful  disposition  as  to 
not  consider  that  kneeling  spoiled  silk  stockings."  Sir  JOHN  died  in 
1647,  and  his  title  and  estate  descended  to  his  nephew,  Sir  John. 

HENRY  HOBART,  youngest  son  of  Sir  Henry  and  Dorothy  (Bell) 
Hobart  was  born  November  17,  16 19.     Nothing  further  of  him  known. 

EDMOND  HUBBARD  (or  Hobart)  was  born  in  1614  (parents  not 
ascertained)  and  lived  at  Holt,  Norfolk.  He  was  an  eminent  royalist, 
and  Cromwell's  soldiers  drove  him  from  his  paternal  estate.  A  coarricr 
named  Ant.  N.  Richards  kept  him  concealed  in  an  outhouse  for  three 
days,  and  then  he  escaped  to  London  and  found  employment  in  a  shoe- 
maker's shop  in  Turnstile,  Holborn,  the  shoemaker  being  apprised  of 


4o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

his  unfortunate  condition  and  his  identity.  Once  he  was  nearly  detected 
"by  the  wife  of  one  of  Cromwell's  soldiers,  to  whom  he  had  been  sent  to 
fit  with  a  pair  of  shoes.  She  noticed  his  very  white  hands,  and  archly 
asked  him  if  he  were  not  some  cavalier  rogue  in  disguise,  saying  such 
hands  had  never  handled  shoemaker's  wax.  He  confessed  to  being  an 
idle  lazy  fellow  and  unable  to  learn  the  trade,  so  his  master  kept  him 
only  to  deliver  orders  and  fit  shoes;  thus  her  suspicions  were  allayed. 
After  his  peril  had  passed  he  returned  to  Holt,  taking  his  master  with 
him  and  maintaining  him  while  he  lived.  Edmond  died  in  1666 
aged  52. 

WILLIAM  HUBBARD  (or  Hobart),  the  younger  brother  of  Edmond, 
and  supposed  to  be  a  descendent  of  Sir  Henry,  was  born  about  1620, 
and  was  also  an  extreme  royalist.  He  was  a  leader  in  an  insurrection- 
ary plot  to  restore  Charles  I.,  the  wandering  exile,  to  the  throne  again. 
He  was  apprehended  in  the  midst  of  these  designs  and  beheaded  at  the 
market  cross,  Norwich,  Norfolk. 

EDWARD  HUBBARD,  of  Canterbury,  Kent,  (ancestral  line  undis- 
covered) was  born  in  1694,  and  became  Prebend  of  Canterbury.  He 
died  there  in  1741. 

Sir  JOHN  HOBART,  who  succeeded  his  uncle  Sir  John,  was  Knight 
of  the  Shire  for  the  County  of  Norfolk  in  the  last  three  Parliaments 
called  by  Charles  II.  He  married  Mary  Hampden,  daughter  of  John 
Hampden,  the  Patriot,  of  Hampden,  Bucks  County,  who  was  the  widow 
of  a  Colonel  Hammond,  of  the  British  Army.  They  left  three  sons, 
Henry,  John  and  Thomas,  and  two  daughters,  Henrietta  and  another. 

THOMAS  HOBART,  son  of  Sir  John  and  Mary  (Hampden)  Hobart, 
studied  law  at  Lincoln's  Inn;  called  to  the  Bar  there,  and  died  un- 
married. 

JOHN  HOBART,  second  son  of  Sir  John  and  Mary  (Hampden) 
Hobart,  became  a  Captain  and  Governor  of  Pendennis  Castle,  and  a 
Brigadier  in  the  British  Army.  He  died  in  1734  and  was  buried  at 
Blickling. 

Sir  HENRY  HOBART,  eldest  son  of  Sir  John  and  Mary  (Hampden) 
Hobart,  was  a  Member  of  Parliament  from  Norfolk,  also  a  soldier.  He  was 
one  of  the  Burgesses  for  Lynn-Regis  in  the  Parliament  that  met  at 
Oxford,  and  in  that  Parliament  showed  himself  for  revolution  and 
declared  the  throne  vacant.  He  was  Equerry,  or  Gentleman  of  the 
Horse,  to  King  William,  and  attended  him  at  the  battle  of  the  Boyne  in 
Ireland,  July  1,  1690,  when  William  fought  his  father-in-law,  James  I. 
In  1698  he  was  put  up  again  for  re-election  from  Norfolk,  but  was 
defeated.  In  the  excitement  of  the  campaign  he  resented  some  words 
spoken  to  him  by  Oliver  LeNeve,  Esq.,  and  a  challenge  and  duel  was  the 


PROMINENT  EXGLISH  HUBBARDS  AND  HOBARTS.    4I 

result,  in  which  Sir  HENRY  passed  his  sword  through  LeNeve's  arm, 
and  he  in  turn  ran  his  sword  into  Sir  HENRY'S  stomach,  of  which  mor- 
tal wound  he  died  August  21,  1698,  and  was  buried  at  Thetford,  Norfolk, 
while  LeNeve  was  tried  at  Norwich  March  16,  1699,  and  found  guilty 
of  manslaughter.  Sir  HENRY  married  the  daughter  of  Joseph  May- 
nard,  Esq.  She  died  August  22,  1701,  leaving  an  only  son,  Sir  John, 
and  three  daughters,  one  of  whom  married  the  Earl  of  Suffolk  and 
another  one  Major-General  Churchill. 

Sir  JOHN  HOBART,  only  son  of  Sir  Henry  and  Lady  (Maynard) 
Hobart,  was  born  in  1692,  and  educated  at  Clare  Hall,  Cambridge.  He 
represented  St.  Ives,  Cornwall,  in  Parliament,  in  1715,  1722  to  1727,  and 
also  Beer  Alston  in  Devonshire  in  1722  and  Norfolk  County  in  1728. 
June  17,  1725,  he  was  created  Knight  of  the  Bath,  and  May  2,  1728,  he 
was  made  Baron  Hobart,  of  Blickling,  by  George  II.,  and  sworn  of  the 
Privy  Council  January  3,  1744-5.  September  5,  1746,  he  was  created 
the  first  Earl  of  Buckinghamshire.  Henrietta,  his  sister,  who  married 
a  Howard,  was  after  Countess  of  Stiff  oik,  and  in  great  favor  with  George 
II.,  and  assisted  very  materially  in  her  brother's  advancement.  Sir 
JOHN  married  Judith  Brittiffe,  daughter  of  Robert  Brittiffe,  of  Bacons- 
thorpe,  Norfolk,  and  by  her  had  three  sons  and  five  daughters,  all  dying 
young  except  John  and  Dorothy.  His  wife  Judith  died  February  7, 
1727,  and  then  Sir  JOHN  married,  February  10,  1728,  Elizabeth  Bristow, 
daughter  of  Robert.  By  her  he  had  two  sons,  George  and  Henry.  She 
died  March  10,  1799,  and  the  Earl  died  in  London  September  22,  1756. 

JOHN  HOBART,  second  Earl  of  Buckinghamshire,  was  born  August 

17,  1723,  of  Sir  John  and  Judith  (Brittiffe)  Hobart,  educated  at  West- 
minster School,  and  matriculated  at  Christ's  College,  Cambridge.  He 
was  Member  Parliament  for  Norwich,  also  St.  Ives  about  1747:  made 
Comptroller  of  the  Household  of  the  King,  January  15,  1756,  and  Privy 
Councillor  January  27,  1756.  He  took  his  seat  in  the  House  of  Lords  De- 
cember 14,  1756,  as  the  second  Earl  of  Buckinghamshire.  He  was  made 
Ambassador  and  Minister  Plenipotentiary  to  Russia,  July  17,  1762,  and 
there  obtained  a  great  insight  into  the  political  and  social  intrigues  of 
the  Court  of  Catherine  II.     He  became  Yiceroy  of  Ireland  December 

18,  1776.  The  Earl  married  July  14,  1761,  Mary  Anne  Drury,  daughter 
of  Sir  Thomas,  Baronet,  of  Overstone,  Northamptonshire,  and  by  her 
had  three  daughters:  Harriet  (born  April  7,  1762),  Caroline  (born 
February  24,  1767),  and  Sophia  (born  in  1768).  She  died  September  30, 
1769,  and  September  24,  1770,  he  married  Caroline  Connolly,  daughter 
of  William  Connolly,  Esq.,  of  Stratton  Hall,  Staffordshire.  By  her  he 
had  three  sons  who  died  in  infancy  and  one  daughter,  Emily  Anne, 
(born  February  20,   1772,  and  who  married  June  9,  1794,  Hon.  Robert 


42  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Stewart,  Marquis  of  Londonderry,  and  died  February  12,  1829).  The 
Earl's  wife,  Caroline,  died  January  26,  181 7,  and  he  died  September  3, 
1793,  aged  70,  and  was  succeeded  by  his  half  brother  George. 

HENRY  HOBART,  second  son  of  Sir  John  and  Elizabeth  (Bristow) 
Hobart,  was  born  about  1733,  and  married  July  22,  1761,  Anna  Margaret 
Bristow,  daughter  of  John  Bristow,  Esq.,  of  Quiddenham,  Norfolk.  He 
had  by  her  two  daughters:  Anna  Catherine  (born  in  1762),  and  Maria 
Anne  (born  in  1763). 

GEORGE  HOBART,  eldest  son  of  Sir  John  and  Elizabeth  (Bristow) 
Hobart,  third  Earl  of  Buckinghamshire,  was  born  about  1732,  and 
represented  St.  Ives,  Cornwall,  in  1761  and  in  1768,  and  also  Beer 
Alston,  Devonshire,  in  1774,  in  Parliament.  He  went  to  St.  Petersburg 
with  his  half  brother,  Sir  John,  in  1762,  as  Secretary  of  the  Embassy. 
He  became  the  third  Earl  of  Buckinghamshire  August  3,  1793.  In  1797 
he  was  Colonel  of  the  Lincolnshire  Militia,  and  in  1799  was  a  Colonel  in 
the  Regular  Army.  He  married  May  22,  1757,  Albinia,  daughter  of 
Lord  Vere  Bertie,  granddaughter  of  Robert  Vere  Bertie,  the  first  Duke 
of  Lancaster.  She  died  March  11,  1816,  and  he  died  November  14, 
1804,  at  Nocton,  in  Lincolnshire,  where  he  was  buried,  leaving  sons 
Robert,  George  Vere,  Charles  and  Henry  Lewis,  and  four  daughters. 

ROBERT  HOBART,  eldest  son  of  George  and  Albinia  (Bertie) 
Hobart,  was  born  May  6,  1760,  educated  at  Westminster  School,  entered 
the  English  Army  and  served  in  the  American  Revolution.  He  was 
Member  Parliament  for  Ireland  and  England.  In  the  English  House  of 
Commons  he  spoke  for  the  abolition  of  slavery,  and  was  an  anti-Catholic, 
though  popular  with  his  political  opponents.  He  was  sworn  of  the 
Privy  Council  May  1,  1793,  and  in  October  1793,  he  became  Governor 
of  Madras,  India.  In  1798  he  returned  to  England  after  a  successful 
administration  and  was  pensioned  annually  at  ^1,500.  He  succeeded 
his  father  to  the  peerage  in  November,  1804,  and  married  January  4, 
1792,  Magaretta,  daughter  of  Edmund  Bourke,  Esq.,  of  Urrey,  Ireland, 
and  widow  of  Thomas  Adderly,  Esq.,  of  Innishannon,  County  Cork, 
Ireland.  She  bore  him  one  daughter  (Sarah  Albinia  Louisa)  and  died 
in  1796.  He  then  married  June  1,  1799,  Eleanor  Agnes,  daughter  of 
William  Eden,  the  first  Lord  Auckland.  They  left  no  issue.  The  Earl 
died  February  4,  1816,  being  thrown  from  his  horse  in  St.  James'  Park, 
London,  and  was  succeeded  by  his  nephew,  George  Robert,  the  fifth 
Earl  of  Buckinghamshire. 

GEORGE  VERE  HOBART,  second  son  of  George  and  Albinia 
(Vere)  Hobart,  was  born  in  1761,  and  became  Governor  of  Grenada. 
He  married  Jane,  daughter  of  Horace  Cateneo,  and  had  by  her  George 
Robert,  Charles  (died  in  1813),  Augustus  Edward,  Albinia  Jane  and 


PROMINENT  ENGLISH  HU BEARDS  AND  HOB  ARTS.    43 

Harriet.  After  his  first  wife's  death  he  married  Janet,  daughter  of 
Colonel  Alexander  McLean,  and  had  by  her  Catherine  Louisa,  who 
married  July  31,  1832,  Donald  Cameron,  of  Lochiel,  Inverness,  Scotland. 
GEORGE  VERE  HOBART  died  in  1802. 

CHARLES  HOBART,  the  third  son  of  George,  the  third  Earl,  and 
Albinia  (Bertie)  Hobart,  was  born  in  February,  1766,  and  entered  the 
Royal  Navy,  where  he  was  killed  while  in  action  with  the  Comte  de 
Grasse,  in  1782. 

HENRY  LEWIS  HOBART,  youngest  son  of  George  and  Albinia 
(Bertie)  Hobart,  was  born  about  1768,  and  studied  theology.  He  took 
holy  orders  and  became  Dean  of  Windsor  in  1816,  and  also  Registrar  of 
the  Order  of  the  Garter.  He  married  October  5,  1824,  Charlotte  Selina 
Moore,  daughter  of  Robert  Moore,  Esq.,  of  Hampton  Court  Palace. 
The  Dean  died  May  8,  1846,  leaving  eight  children,  viz.:  Robert 
Hexry,  George  Bertie,  Benjamin,  Louisa  Charlotte,  Maria  Ade- 
laide, Albinia  Mary,  Sophia  Ann  aad  Eleanor. 

GEORGE  ROBERT  HOBART,  the  fifth  Earl  of  Buckinghamshire, 
and  son  of  George  Vere  and  Jane  (Cateneo)  Hobart,  was  born  May  r, 
1789.  He  married,  May  3,  181 9,  Anna  Glover,  daughter  of  Sir  Arthur 
Pigot.     He  died  in  February,  1849,  leaving  no  issue. 

AUGUSTUS  EDWARD  HOBART,  the  third  son  of  George  Vere 
and  Jane  (Cateneo)  Hobart,  was  born  about  1793,  and  succeeded  his 
brother,  George  Robert,  becoming  the  sixth  Earl  of  Buckinghamshire. 
He  married  September  12,  1816,  Mary,  daughter  of  John  Williams, 
Serjeant-at-Law.  His  wife  died  in  1825,  leaving  Vere  Henry  (born 
December  8,  18 18,  at  Welbourn,  Lincolnshire;  married  August  4,  1853, 
Mary  Catharine,  daughter  of  Right  Rev.  Thomas  Carr,  Bishop  of  Bom- 
bay. Vere  Henry  was  Director  of  the  Ottoman  Bank,  India,  and 
Governor  of  Madras  in  1872.  He  died  there  of  typhoid  fever  April  27, 
1875),  Frederick  John  (born  March  6,  182 1,  married  Catherine  Annes- 
ley,  youngest  daughter  of  Bishop  Thomas  Carr),  Augustus  Charles 
(born  April  1,  1822,  married  in  1848,  Mary  Anne,  daughter  of  Col- 
quohoun  Grant),  Charles  Edward  (born  January  26,  1825,  married 
December,  1853,  Catharine,  daughter  of  Dr.  A.  Cooke;  she  died  in  1859), 
Albinia  Francis  (born  1825  (?);  married  May  28,  1854,  Henry  Arlington 
Pye),  Georgiana  Mary  (born  in  i82(?).  After  the  death  of  his  first 
wife,  Earl  AUGUSTUS  then  married  August  15,  1826,  Maria  Isabella, 
eldest  daughter  of  Rev.  Godfrey  Egremont,  and  by  her  had  George 
Augustus  (born  in  1827;  married  June  9,  1857,  Jane,  daughter  of  Sir 
John  W.  Audry,  of  Natton  House,  Wilts  County),  William  Arthur  (born 
in  1828,  married  June  1,  1857,  Marian,  daughter  of  Richard  K.  Dawson, 
of   Frickley   Hall,  Yorkshire),  Horace    Miles    (born   in    1829),  Maria 


44  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

Catharine,  Charlotte  Augusta,  Louisa  Selina,  and  Eleanor  Agnes. 
His  Lordship  was  Prebendary  of  Wolverhampton. 

AUGUSTUS  CHARLES  HOBART,  son  of  Augustus  Edward  and 
Mary  (Williams)  Hobart,  was  born  April  i,  1822,  at  Walton-on-the- Wolds, 
Leicestershire,  Eng.,  and  was  known  as  Hobart- Hampden  and  also  as 
Hobart  Pasha.  He  was  in  the  English  Navy  and  also  in  the  employ  of 
the  Turkish  Sultan  in  the  Cretan  Rebellion.  He  later  became  an  En- 
glish Vice-Admiral.  He  married  Mary  Anne  Grant,  daughter  of  Dr. 
Colquohoun  Grant.  She  died  May  13  (April  6  (?),  1877,  and  he  married 
Edith  Kathleen  Hore  (formerly  a  nun),  daughter  of  Herbert  Francis 
Hore,  of  Pole  Hore,  Wexford.  He  published  a  sensational  volume 
called  "  Sketches,"  which  included  some  naval  experience  while  he  was 
in  the  employ  of  the  Confederate  Service,  C.  S.  A.,  as  a  blockade  runner. 
He  died  in  1886. 

Right  Hon.  JOHN  GELLIBRAND  HUBBARD,*  eldest  son  of  John 
of  Stratford  Grove,  Essex  (who  died  in  1847)  and  Marianna  (Morgan) 
Hubbard  (who  died  in  1851),  the  daughter  of  John  Morgan,  of  Bram- 
field  Place,  Hertfordshire,  was  born  Mch  21,  1805,  and  died  at  Adding- 
ton  Manor,  Aug  28,  1889,  and  was  there  buried  in  the  parish  church- 
yard. He  was  educated  at  Bordeaux,  France;  was  a  well-known  Russia 
merchant,  as  was  his  father,  and  represented  the  shire  of  Buckingham 
from  1859  to  1868  in  the  House  of  Commons,  where  he  was  recognized 
as  a  rare  authority  upon  finance,  and  for  many  years  was  one  of  the 
Directors  of  the  Bank  of  England,  of  which  he  afterward  became  Gov- 
ernor-General. From  1874  to  1887  he  represented  the  City  of  London 
in  Parliament.  He  was  also  Chairman  of  the  Public  Works  Loan  Com- 
mission and  Deputy  Lieutenant  for  Bucks  and  London.  He  built  and 
endowed  St.  Albans  Church,  Holborn,  which  was  consecrated  Feb  26, 
1863.  July  22,  1887,  he  was  raised  to  the  Peerage  and  made  Lord  Ad- 
dington,  of  Addington  Manor,  Surrey.  The  Baron  married  May  19, 
1837,  the  Honorable  Maria  Margaret  Napier  (b  Mch  18,  181 7)  now 
Dowager  Lady  Addington,  eldest  daughter  of  William  John,  the  eighth 
Lord  Napier,  and  Eliza  Cochrane-Johnstone.  Children— Hon.  Alice 
Eliza  (b  Dec  2,  1841),  Sir  Egerton  (see  following),  Hon.  Francis  Ed- 
ward (b  Feb  11,  1844,  d  Dec  25,  1871),  Hon.  Lucy-Marian  (b  May  19, 

*  The  compiler  has  enjoyed  the  privilege  of  reading  many  of  his  letters  that  have  been  written  to 
Hubbards  in  this  country.  Touching  quite  fully,  as  they  generally  did,  upon  the  old  country  history 
of  Hubbards,  their  origin,  inherited  traits,  occupations,  etc.,  they  made  pleasant  and  profitable  read- 
ing, and  induced  frequent  perusals.  The  Baron  was  always  glad  to  respond  promptly  and  fully  to  all 
enquiries  upon  subjects  concerning  the  Hubbard  race.  He  was  an  Honorary  Member  of  the  New 
England  Society,  instituted  in  New  York  City  in  1805.  His  European  business  plants  were  numerous 
and  of  immense  proportions,  embracing  in  part  print  works  at  St.  Petersburg,  a  bank  at  Moscow,  and 
lumber  interests  in  Finland.  The  present  firm  is  known  as  John  Hubbard  &  Co.,  St.  Helen's  Place, 
London,  nearly  opposite  to  the  American  Consulate,  which  name  it  has  borne  for  many  years. 


PROMINENT  ENGLISH  HUBBARDS  AND  HOBARTS. 


45 


1845),  Hon.  Cecil  John  (b  Sep  6,  1846,  m  1872,  Helen  Jane,  3d  dau  Ar- 
thur Macdonald  Ritchie,  Esq,  Bar-at-Law,  Lieut.-Col.  Grenadier  Guards), 
Hon.  Arthur  Gellibrand  (b  Feb  6,  1848,  m  June  29,  1881,  Amy  d'Es- 
terre,  dau  Charles  Huntley,  Esq,  Resident  Magistrate  of  Albany,  South 
Africa),  Hon.  Rose-Ellen  (b  Jan  13,  185 1),  Hon.  Evelyn  (b  Mch  18, 
1852,  m  Aug  25,  1881,  Evaline  Maude,  youngest  dau  Wyndham  S. 
Portal,  Esq,  of  Malshanger,  Hants),  Hon.  Clemency  (b  Oct  26,  1856,  m 
Sep  4,  1888,  Major  George  Barker,  R.  E.). 

Sir  EGERTON  HUBBARD,  second  Lord  Addington,  of  Adding- 
ton  Manor,  Surrey,  in  the  Peerage  of  the  United  Kingdom,  Major  and 
Hon.  Lt.-Col.  1st  Bucks  R.  V.  formerly  Lieut.  R.  Bucks,  Yeo.  Cav  (b 
Dec  29,  1842,  succeeded  to  baronetcy  Aug  28,  1889,  m  June  3,  1880, 
Mary  Adelaide,  daugh'r  Wyndham  Spencer  Portal,  Esq,  of  Malshanger, 
Hants).  Children — Hon.  Winifred  Mary  (b  Sep  6,  1881),  Hon 
John  Gellibrand  (b  June  7,  1883),  Hon.  Raymond  Egerton  (b  Nov  11, 
1884),  Hon.  Francis  Spencer  (b  July  1,  1888).  Town  residence — 24 
Princes  Gate,  S.  W.  London.  He  was  a  Member  of  Parliament  from 
Buckingham  from  1874  to  1880,  and  for  the  North  Division  of  Bucking- 
hamshire from  1886  to  1889,  and  at  present  is  at  the  head  of  the  firm  of 
John  Hubbard  &  Co.,  mentioned  in  foot  note  on  previous  page. 


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Wherever  virtue  resists  temptation,  -wherever  men  meet  death  for  religion's  sake,  wherever  the 
gilded  baseness  of  the  world  stands  abashed  before  conscientious  principle,  there  will  be  the  spirit  ot 
the  Puritans— Edwin  Percy  Whipple. 

ROBERT  HUBBARD  was  "  marryed  "  to  Margaret  Allen  the  second 
day  of  June,  1654,  by  William  Hibbins  according;  to  the  early  re- 
cords of  Boston.     Children— Daniel  (b  May  9,  1655),  and  John  (b  May 
18,  1656).    No  further  traces  of  this  ROBERT  HUBBARD  or  his  chil- 
dren have  yet  come  to  light.     [Douglas  Hubbard  records  report  that 
"he  went  to  Dover,  N.  H.,  and  his  descendants  settled  in  Maine."] 

HUGH  HUBBARD  was  born  in  Derbyshire,  England,  about  1640, 
and  came  over  and  settled  in  New  London,  Ct.,  in  1670.  March  18,  1673, 
he  married  Jane,  daughter  of  Gary  and  Elizabeth  (Masters)  Latham 
(widow  of  Edmund  Lockwood)  of  (1)  Cambridge,  Mass.,  (2)  New  Lon- 
don, Ct.  In  1685  he  died  and  his  widow  married  John  Williams.  She 
died  May  3,  1739,  aged  91.  Children  (born  in  New  London)— Mary 
(b  Nov  17,  1674),  Lvoia  (b  Feb  7,  1676),  Margaret,  Jane,  Ann,  and  a 
son  (who  died  in  infancy,  leaving  none  to  progenerate  the  male  line) 
were  born  later  at  unknown  dates. 

ANTHONY  HUBBARD  was  born  in  England  (probably  after  1620), 
and  with  his  sister  Ann  came  over  and  settled  in  Dedham,  Mass.,  prior 
to  1638.  April  14,  1648,  he  married  Sarah,  daughter  of  Michael  Bacon, 
(reputed  to  have  come  from  Ireland)  one  of  Dedham's  original  found- 
ers, which  began  its  official  existence  September  10,  1636.  His  wife  died 
in  1652,  and  January  5,  1652-3,  he  married  Jane  Ely,  possibly  a  relative 
of  Nathaniel  and  Martha  Ely  of  (1)  Cambridge,  Mass.,  (2)  Hartford,  Ct. 
He  acquired  no  prominence  and  but  little  property.  His  estate  amounted 
February  20,  1656-7  to  but  £9  and  10s.  Children,  born  in  Dedham, 
(by  Sarah)— John  (b  Apl  14,  1649),  and  Abraham  (b  Mch  11,  1650,  d 
Mch  iS,  1650). 
47 


48  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

ANN  HUBBARD  was  born  in  England  (probably  before  1620),  and 
came  over  with  her  brother  Anthony  and  settled  in  Dedham,  Mass. 
July  8,  1638,  she  married  William  Barstow  (son  of  John  of  Cambridge) 
who,  with  his  brother  George,  came  to  New  England  in  1636  on  the 
ship  Truelove  from  London  and  were  of  the  original  founders  of  the 
"Plantacion  of  Dedham."  This  marriage  was  the  third  one  celebrated 
after  the  founding  of  the  town.  She  joined  the  church  in  June,  1639. 
The  "  Barstows  "  reached  som<-  prominence  during  the  early  colonial 
period.  This  family  afterward  removed  to  Scituate,  R.  I.,  where  Wil- 
liam Barstow  died  January  1,  1669.  ANN  (HUBBARD)  BARSTOW 
then  married  John  Prince,  of  Hull.  Children  (born  in  Dedham)— Jo- 
seph (b  June  6,  1639),  Mary  (b  Dec  28,  1641),  Patienxf.  (b  Dec  3,  1643): 
(born  in  Scituate)— Sarah,  Daughter,  Deborah  (b  Aug,  1650),  William 
(b  Sep,  1652),  and  Martha  (b   1655). 

WILLIAM  HUBBARD  was  an  inhabitant  of  Saugus  (Lynn),  Mass., 
Mch  28, 1637.  Thomas  Hubbard  was  also  an  inhabitant  therebetween  1637 
and  1640;  (also  James  Hubbard,  who  went  to  Long  Island.  See  Graves- 
end,  Long  Island,  Hubbards).  WILLIAM  and  Thomas  stopped  awhile 
in  Wethersfield,  Ct.,  and  then  Thomas  probably  went  to  Hartford  (see 
elsewhere  under  Early  Settlers),  while  of  WILLIAM  but  little  has  been 
learned.  The  Connecticut  colonial  records  show,  however,  that  he  was 
plaintiff  in  a  suit  against  Thomas  Marshfield  June  15,  1643;  damages 
^12.  In  Hartford  is  a  church  record  showing  that  a  daughter,  Sarah, 
was  born  to  him  July  10,  1647.  Oct  11,  1659,  it  is  recorded  that  he 
testified  regarding  "  a  colt."  This  lawsuit,  in  which  he  was  concerned, 
took  place  within  the  jurisdiction  of  New  Haven,  so  he  had  in  all  prob- 
ability removed  from  Hartford  before  this  date.  These  meager  facts 
are  all  that  have  yet  been  discovered  of  him. 

THOMAS  HUBBARD  was  born  in  England  in  (?)  1625,  and  (>) 
sailed  with  William  Hubbard  for  New  England  April  13,  1635,  in  the 
ship  Elizabeth  and  Ann,  Roger  Cooper,  master.  In  1647  *  he  appears  to 
have  been  in  Hartford,  according  to  the  following  extract  from  the  Co- 
lonial Records:    "September  2,  1547— f  Tho:   Hubbert  for  refusing  to 

*  It  is  quite  probable  that  he  was  related  to  the  Hubbards  who  settled  in  Cambridge,  Mass.  James 
Hubbard,  of  Watertown,  had  a  son  Thomas,  as  also  had  James  of  Cambridge.  Yet  he  could  hardly 
have  been  the  son  of  either  of  these  James',  for  they  were  apparently  too  young  to  be  settling  away 
from  home.  Milton,  in  his  Church  Records  of  Cambridge,  mentions  as  having  left  there  "  THOMAS 
HUBBARD— Joined  to  the  church  at  Weathersfield."  [No  date].  So  whether  he  was  related  to  tin  >se 
Hubbards  there  or  not,  there  is  but  little  doubt  that  he  lived  awhile  in  Cambridge  before  arriving  in 
Connecticut.  [Douglas  Hubbard  records  state  that  this  Thomas  was  born  in  1620  and  that  he  was 
the  son  of  James  and  Sarah  (Ives)  Hubbard  of  Watertown.  The  scanty  and  fragmentary  records 
about  him  prevent  conviction.] 

t Royal  K.Hinman,  historian,  says  (erroneously)  that  "THOMAS  HUBBARD  was  licensed  to 
trade  for  beaver  in  1633  "  in  Weathersfield.  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown  was  probably  meant. 


EARLY  SETTLERS.  49 

watch  is  fyned  Xs."  From  Hartford  he  went  to  Middletown,  and  was 
made  a  freeman  there  May  21,  1657.  Lands  were  conveyed  to  him  Jan- 
nary  16,  1666,  and  March  22,  1670,  his  estate  was  valued  at  £61  in  the 
inventory  made  of  the  property  of  all  householders  and  proprietors.  He 
married  Mary  Curtis,  of  Middletown,  died  in  167 1,  and  was  buried  in  the 
Riverside  Cemetery.  His  widow  afterward  in  Oct,  1674,  married  Dea- 
con John  Hall,  Jr.,  an  early  settler  of  Middletown,  recorder,  b  1619  in 
England,  d  Jan  22,  1694,  in  Middletown,  son  of  John  and  Anna  (Wilcox) 
Hall  who  both  came  to  New  England  in  1633.  His  epitaph  shines  in 
rhyme  with  his  various  virtues,  viz.: 

"  Here  lyes  our  Deacon  Hall,  who  studied  peace  with  all. 
Was  upright  in  his  life,  void  of  malignant  strife,  gone  to  his 
Rest,  left  us  in  sorrow,  doubtless,  his  good  works  will  him  follow." 

Children  (born  in  Middletown)— Mary  (b  Jan  3,  1656),  Thomas  (b 
Aug  6,  1661),  Ebexezer  (b  Aug  2,  1664,  d  Apl  29,  1743,  in  Middletown; 
constable  1699-1700,  m  May  5,  1690,  Mary  Warner,  b  1665,  d  in  Aug, 
1739,  no  children;  his  will  dated  Jan  23,  1742,  leaves  property  to  Ebenezer 
Gage  and  wife,  "  loving  cousin  Daniel  Stow,  and  Azuba,  his  wife,  also 
40  shillings  to  the  Church  of  Christ,  Rev.  William  Russell,  pastor," 
both  tombstones  standing — 1894),  John  (b  Jan  1,  1666,  din  Middletown 
Apl  23,  1676),  and  George  (b  Apl  2,  1669-70,  d  in  Middletown  Feb  19, 
1688-9,  probably  unm). 

ELIZABETH  HUBBARD  (supposed  to  have  been  the  consort  of  a 
son  of  James  and  Naomi  (Cocke)  Hubbard,  of  Mendlesham,  Suffolk, 
England)  came  over  with  her  brother-in-law  Samuel,  and  his  (?)  brother 
Benjamin,  and  wife  Alice  (Ward),  in  October,  1633,  and  settled  upon 
Charlestown  Neck.  She  probably  at  that  time  was  a  widow,  and  died 
in  January,  1643-4,  at  Boston,  Mass.,  leaving  an  estate  worth  ^239  and 
1  S.S-.     Her  will,  probated  June  7,  1644,  is,  substantially,  as  follows: 

"  The  said  Elisabeth  Hobert  being  not  well,  &  yet  being  in  perfect 
sence  and  vnderstanding,  do  make  this  as  my  last  will  &  testament: 
that  my  daughter  Hannah  Hobert  &  my  sonne  Benjamin  Hobert,  I  do 
make  them  my  whole  executors  joyntly,  together  of  all  those  goods  wch 
are  mine,  with  this  pro  visor:  my  executors  to  pay  three  score  &  ten 
pounds  &  ten  shillings  to  Hannah  Carrington  assoone  as  the  goods  can 
be  sould.  also  to  pay  to  the  said  Stocdell  Carrington  foure  pounds  & 
some  odde  money:  also  to  my  sonne  Richard  Hobert  twelve  pence. 
Also  todau  Hanner  Hobert  &  to  sonne  Benjamin  Hobert  &to  daughter 
Sarah  Hobert  &  to  daughter  Rachell  Hobert  equal  portions  of  what  io 
left  when  all  cost  of  chardges  is  paid.  Youngest  daughter  Rachell  to 
have  three  pounds  more  than  the  rest  of  my  three  children — that  is  to 
say,  Hannah,  Benjamin  &  Sarah.     The  executors  to  have  a  tender  care 


5o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

of  their  youngest  sister  Rachell.    Robert  Hull  &  Thomas  Clarke  desired 
to  be  overseers  of  will,  to  see  it  fulfilled  as  neere  as  they  can. 

"ELISABETH  HOBBERT." 

"  Witnes:  Robert  Hull,  Thomas  Clarke.  Proved  40  7°  M°  1644,  before 
me,  Samuell  Symonds,  &  me,  Increase  Nowell." 

Children  (born  in  England  presumably) — Hannah,  Benjamin,  Sarah, 
Richard,  Rachell. 

BENJAMIN  HUBBARD,  son  of  (?)  James  and  Naomi  (Cocke)  Hub- 
bard of  Mendlesham,  Suffolk,  England,  was  born  in  1608,  and  with  his 
wife  Alice  (Ward)  Hubbard  came  to  Boston  in  October,  1633,  and  set- 
tled upon  Charlestown  Neck.  There  is  reason  to  believe  that  he  was 
also  accompanied  by  his  brother  Samuel  and  sister-in-law  Elizabeth  and 
her  children,  and  that  they  all  sailed  from  Gravesend,  Eng.,  in  August, 
1633,  on  the  ship  James,  Grant,  master.  He  was  admitted  to  the  church 
November  9,  1633,  with  his  wife  Alice,  and  made  freeman  September 
3,  1634.  Of  a  dozen  householders  in  Charlestown  at  that  time  he  was 
one  of  them,  and  dignified  with  the  title  of  respect  of  "  Mr.,"  then  only 
given  to  important  personages  in  the  colony,  the  less  distinguished  form 
of  address  being  "  goodman,"  or  "  yeoman."  He  was  a  conservative 
friend  of  the  celebrated  John  Wheelwright,  the  religious  agitator,  who 
was  afterward  banished  from  the  Massachusetts  Bay  Colony  (with  the 
equally  celebrated  Ann  Hutchinson)  and  located  in  Wells,  Me.  It  is  on 
record  that  he  was  clerk  of  the  writs  of  Charlestown  in  164 1  and  was  con- 
siderable of  a  scholar  and  navigator.  He  owned  land  in  Charlestown  in 
1637,  viz:  10  acres  on  the  Mystic  side,  a  house  and  two  lots  southwest 
of  Mill  Hill,  51  acres  at  Waterfield,  1  acre  at  Eastfield,  and  land  at 
Seekonk. 

December  22,  1644,  he  sailed  for  England,  and  landed  at  Deal,  in 
Kent,  where  he  met  his  elder  brother  Thomas.  He  afterward  went  to 
see  his  cousin,  Joseph  Hubbard,  who  lived  in  Ipswich,  Suffolk.  From 
London  he  wrote  to  New  England  to  Governor  Win throp  in  1645  about 
his  "invention  concerning  longitude."  In  1652  he  was  a  minister  in 
Cobdock,  Suffolk.  March  8,  1654,  he  was  living  in  Ardleigh,  between 
Dedham  and  Colchester,  Essex.  During  1645,  after  his  wife  Alice  had 
sold  their  house  and  one  acre  at  Eastfield  to  John  Green,  she  and  their 
five  children  rejoined  him  in  England. 

English  records  state  that  he  died  Oct  28,  1660,  leaving  widow  Alice  and 
five  children.  Before  July,  1663,  these  five  children  (?)  had  returned  to 
New  England.  Children  (born  in  Charlestown,  Mass) — Benjamin  (b 
Mch  24,  1634,  may  have  gone  to  Jamaica,  L.  I.,  in  1659),  Ichabod  (b  Oct 
3,  1635,  d  in  July,  1636),  Elizabeth  (b  June  2,  1636,  and  as  late  as  July 
6,  1668,  was  unm),  Thomas  (b  May  31,  1639),  Hannah  (b  Dec  16,  1641, 


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EARLY  SETTLERS.  D3 

m  (?)  Richard  Brooks,   a  gunsmith,  of  Boston),  and  James  (b  Dec   16, 

JAMES  HUBBARD,  (?)  son  of  James  and  Naomi  (Cocke)  Hubbard,* 
was  born  in  1609  in  Suffolk  County  (probably  Mendlesham),  England. 
He  may  have  been  the  James  who  sailed  from  London  May  21,  1635,  on 
the  barque  Mathew,  Richard  Goodladd,  master,  with  his  wife  Sarah 
(Ives)  Hubbard,  nephew  (?)  Richard,  children  Sarah,  James,  and  per- 
haps others.  He  settled  in  Watertown,  Mass.,  and  died  there  in  Janu- 
ary, 1639.  (His  widow  married  William  Hamlet  afterward.)  Children— 
James,  Sarah,  Thomas,  and  others,  names  unknown  (see  following). 

JAMES,  the  eldest  (supposed)  son,  was  born  in  England  in  1631,  and 
died  in  Cambridge,  Mass.,  August  28,  1693.  After  his  father's  death  hef 
removed  to  Cambridge,  Mass.,  and  Sep  29,  1659,  married  Sarah  Win- 
ship.  June  17,  1662,  she  bore  him  a  daughter,  Sarah  (m  Nicholas 
Bowes  of  Cambridge,  Mass.,  June  26,  1684,  and  d  Jan  26,  1688.  Bowes 
was  b  in  1656  and  d  in  Boston  in  172 1,  after  being  m  to  (1)  Sarah  Hub- 
bard (2),  Dorcas  Champney,  and  (3)  Martha  Remington).  She  then 
bore  him  Oct  20,  1665,  Mary  (m  Jason  Russel  May  27,  1684,  and  had 
Hubbard  Russet,  b  1685,  d  June  4,  1726,  who  m  and  had  children),  and 
died  in  childbed  Oct  22,  1665.  JAMES  was  made  freeman  May  23, 
1666,  and  was  one  of  Cambridge's  tythingmen  in  1679;  he  also  served  in 
the  King  Philip  Indian  War  in  Capt.  Nathaniel  Davenport's  Company; 
and  Jan  8,  1688,  he  married  Hannah,  daughter  of  Miles  Ives,  of  Water- 
town,  Mass.,  who  after  his  death  became  his  executor  and  residuary 
legatee.  She  died  childless,  but  was  a  faithful  mother  to  his  step- 
children. The  inscription  upon  her  monument  in  the  parish  church 
yard  at  Cambridge  adjoining  Harvard  University  grounds  reads: 

Here  lyes  buried  Hannah  Hubert, 

the  loving  wife  of  James  Hubert,  a  tender  and  loving  mother  to  his  children; 

careful  of  their  souls  and  bodies, 

loving  and  faithful,  diligent  and  prudent, 

who  departed  this  life  in  sweet  peace  the  24th  day  of 

November,  1690. 

*  James  and  Naomi  (Cocke)  Hubbard,  of  Mendelsham,  Suffolk,  England,  were  the  parents  of  ten 
children.  Benjamin,  James,  Rachel,  and  Samuel  came  to  America,  but  probably  none  of  the  others. 
Thomas,  the  eldest  son,  was  born  in  1604,  and  with  his  wife  Esther  lived  in  Freeman  Lane,  near 
Horsley,'  down  in  Southwark,  London.  Sarah,  the  eldest  daughter,  married  John  Jackson,  and  lived 
in  Yarmouth,  Norfolk.  She  was  born  in  159:1  and  had  a  son  Robert,  who  served  four  years  under 
Oliver  Cromwell.  Rachel  married  John  Brandish,  of  Ipswich,  Suffolk,  England,  and  came  to  New 
England  in  1633.  They  lived  in  Salem,  Mass.,  Wethersfield,  and  Fairfield,  Ct.,  and  had  children  Mary 
(b  in  Ipswich,  Eng.,  in  1628,  and  m  Francis  Purdy,  of  Fairfield,  Ct.),  John  (b  in  Salem,  Mass.,  in  1633, 
and  lived  awhile  in  Fairfield  and  then  removed  to  Flushing,  New  Netherlands),  Bethia  (.b  in  Wethers- 
field, Ct.,  in  1637,  m  Timothy  Knapp,  of  Greenwich,  near  Stamford,  Ct.),  and  a  posthumous  son  (b  in 
1639  in  Wethersfield).  Rachel  ^Hubbard)  Brandish,  after  the  death  of  her  husband,  married  Anthony- 
Wilson,  of  Fairfield,  Ct.    The  names  of  the  other  four  children  of  James  are  unknown. 

t  His  own  and  wife's  monument  are  yet  standing  in  the  old  Cambridge  Darish  churchyard.  This 
church  was  established  in  1636.  The  monuments  are  of  thick  slate  and  have  withstood  time's  ele- 
ments remarkably  well,  the  inscriptions  being  quite  legible. 


54  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

SARAH  was  born  in  England,  and  married  at  Billerica,  Oct  13,  1657, 
Samuel  Champney,  of  Cambridge,  Mass.  He  was  a  representative  from 
there  in  1686,  1689  and  1692.  Children— Samuel,  Sarah,  Mary,  Esther, 
Samuel,  Joseph,  Richard  and  Daniel. 

THOMAS  was  born  in  Watertown,  Mass.,  August  10,  1638.  Nothing 
positively  known  of  him.  According  to  Milton  (Church  Records  of 
Cambridge,  Mass.)  he  went  to  Wethersfield,  Ct.  Milton  says:  "James 
Hubbard,  Sarah  Hubbard,  now  Champney,  admitted  into  fellowship  of 
the  church;  THOMAS  HUBBARD  now  joined  to  the  Church  of 
Wethersfield." 

SAMUEL  HUBBARD,  youngest  son  of  James  and  Naomi  (Cocke) 
Hubbard,  was  born  in   Mendlesham  (a  market  town  about  eighty  miles 
northeast  of  London),  Suffolk  County,  in   1610.     He  arrived  in  Salem, 
Mass.,  in  October,  1633,  and  probably  came  in  the  ship  James,  Grant, 
master,  which  left  Gravesend,  England,  late  in  August,  1633,  and  arrived 
in  Massachusetts  Bay  October  10,  1633.     He  says  in  his  Diary,*  "  I  was 
born  of  good  parents.     My  Mother  brought  me  up  in  the  fear  of  the 
Lord,  in  Mendlesham,  in  catechiseing  me  and  hearing  choice  ministers," 
&c.     March  4,  1634-5,  he  was  admitted  a  freeman,  and  shortly  moved  to 
Watertown,  Mass.,  where  he  joined  the  church  "  by  giving  account  of 
my  faith."     This  same  year  he  went  to  Dorchester  (Windsor),  Ct.,  with 
the  overland  migrators.     He  was  married  there  by  Mr.  [Roger  ?j  Lud- 
low to  Tacy  Cooper,  who  was  born  in  England  in   1608  and  came  to 
Dorchester,  Mass.,  June  9,  1634,  and  to  Dorchester  (Windsor),  Ct.,  in 
1635.     She  had  brothers  Robert,  of  Yarmouth,  Norfolk,  and  John  of 
London,    Eng.     Robert  returned  to  England   from   America  in    1644. 
SAMUEL  HUBBARD  went  to  Wethersfield,  Ct.,  in  1637,  and  May  10, 
1639,  removed  to  Springfield,  Mass.,  which  he  left  for  Fairfield,  Ct,  in 
1647,  though  staying  there  but  a  short  time  on  account  of  church  dis- 
agreements.    SAMUEL  was  now  with  his  wife  imbibing  freely  and 
preaching  ardently  the  doctrines  of  Anabaptism.     He  says  in  his  diary: 
"God   having   enlightened   both   (but  mostly  my  wife)  into  his  holy 
ordinance  of  baptising  only  of  visible  believers,  and  being  very  zealous 
for  it,  she  was  mostly  struck  at,  and  answered  two  terms  publicly,  where 
I  was  said  to  be  as  bad  as  she,  and  sore  threatened  with  imprisonment 
to  Hartford  jail,  if  not  to  renounce  it  or  to  remove:  that  scripture  came 
into  our  minds:  "  If  they  persecute  you  in  one  place  flee  to  another;" 
and  so  we  did  2  day  of  October,  1648.     We  went  for  Rhode  Island  and 

*  Copious  notes  were  made  from  this  diary  by  Dr.  Isaac  Backus,  a  Baptist  historian  of  about  1777. 
These  notes  are  now  possessed  by  Ray  Greene  Hiding,  of  New  Bedford,  Mass.,  though  the  original 
diary  and  other  valuable  manuscripts  of  Samuel  Hubbard  disappeared  about  1852.  There  are  living 
descendants  of  this  Samuel  Hubbard  through  Bethiah  Hubbard  and  Joseph  Clarke  of  various  names, 
but  T"->ne  of  the  name  of  Hubbard. 


EARLY  SETTLERS.  55 

arrived  there  the  1 2  day.     I  and  my  wife  upon  our  manifestation  of  our 
faith  were  baptised  by  brother   Joseph   Clarke,  3   day  of   November, 

1648." 

SAMUEL  HUBBARD  spent  the  remainder  of  his  life  in  and  about 
Newport,  or  "  Mayford,"  as  he  termed  it.     He  was  a  zealous  Baptist  and 
public  religous  disputant.     For  twenty-three  years  he  belonged  to  the 
First  Baptist  Church  of  Newport,  which  sent  him  August  7,  1651,  to 
Boston  "  to  visit  the  bretherin  who  was  imprisoned  in  Boston  jayl  for 
witnessing  the  truth  of  baptising  believers  only,  viz:  Brothers  John 
Clarke,  Obadiah  Holmes,  and  John  Crandall."     In  1657  he  went  with 
Holme's  on  a  preaching  tour  on  Long  Island.     In  1664  he  was  appointed 
General  Solicitor  of  the  Colony.     April  7,  1668,  he  went  to  Boston  with 
Joseph  Torrey  and  William   Hiscox  "  to  publicly  dispute  with  those 
baptised  there."     December  23,  167 1,  with  his  wife,  one  daughter,  and 
four  other  persons  he  formed  the  first  Seventh  Day  Baptist  Church  in 
America.     In  July,  1668,  he  wrote  a  letter  to  his  cousin  John  Smith,  of 
London,  detailing  his  worldly  possessions  "  through  God's  great  mercy." 
In  1675  in  his  diary  he  refers  to  a  "  testament  of  my  grandfather  Cocke's,, 
printed  in  1549,  which  he  [Cocke]  hid  in  his  bed  straw  lest  it  should  be 
found  and  burned  in  Queen  Mary's  days."     In  1676  he  corresponded 
with  Dr.  Edward  Stennett,  Pastor  of  the  Seventh  Day  Baptist  Church 
in  Bell  Lane,  London.     John  Thornton  and  Roger  Williams  of  Rhode: 
Island,  and  Governor  Leete  of  Connecticut  were  his  friends.    He  died  be- 
tween'1688  and  1692,  and  his  wife  after  1697,  but  no  traces  of  their  burial 
places  have  been  found.     Children— Naomi  (b  Nov  18,  1637,  at  Wethers- 
field,  Ct,  d  Nov  28,  1637),  Naomi  (b  Oct  19,  1638,  at  Wethersfield,  Ct,  d 
in  Springfield,  Mass,  May  5,  1643),  Ruth  (b  Jan  n,  1640,  in  Springfield, 
Mass,  d  in  Westerly,  R.  I.,  in  1691,  m  Robert  Burdick  of  "  Musquamicot," 
or  Westerly,  R.  I.,  who  was  made  freeman  May  22,  1655,  d  in  1692,  and 
had  Robert,  Son,  Hubbard,   Thomas,  Naomi,  Ruth,  Benjamin,  Samuel, 
Tacy  and  Deborah),  Rachel  (b  Mch   10,  1642,  in  Springfield,  Mass,  m 
Nov  3,  1658,  Andrew  Langworthy,  who  came  to  Newport,  R.  I.,  in  1656, 
and  had  Samuel  and  James),  Samuel  (b  in  Springfield,  Mass.,  Mch  25, 
1644,  d  y),  Bethiah  (b  in  Springfield  Dec  19,  1646,  d  at  Westerly,  R.  I., 
Apl  '17,  1707,  m  Joseph  Clarke  Jr,  formerly  of  Westhorpe,  Suffolk,  Eng., 
b  there  Apl   2,  1643,  d  Jan   11,  1727,  and  had  Judith,  Joseph,  Samuel, 
John,  Bethiah,  Mary,  Susauah,  Thomas  and  William),  and  Samuel  (b  in 
Newport  Nov  30,  1649,  d  there  unm  Jan  20,  1670-1). 

THOMAS  HUBBARD  was  born  in  1653,  but  whether  in  England  or 
America  is  unknown,  but  more  probably  in  England.  He  settled  in 
Boston  and  was  there  a  merchant  or  trader,  according  to  the  records, 
which  recite  that  in  June,  1701,  THOMAS  HUBBARD,  with  others.. 


56  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AXD   GENEALOGY. 

"merchants  and  traders,"  petitioned  the  deputy  governor  for  a  bank- 
rupt law,  "  as  in  England."  The  signs  indicate  that  he  was  wealthy  and 
prominent,  of  good  family,  and  had  the  right  to  bear  arms.  He  married 
Mary  Tuthill,  daughter  of  John  and  Mary  (Holyoke)  Tuthill,  and  sister 
to  Lieut.  Zechariah  Tuthill  of  Boston  (b  1669,  d  Jan  7,  1721),  founder 
of  Brattle  Street  Church  and  who  was  in  charge  of  Castle  William,  Bos- 
ton Harbor.  Her  sister  Sarah  m  Nov  12,  1702,  James  Gooch.  Her 
sister  Susannah  m  May  8,  1707,  Abraham  Blish.  Her  grandfather  was 
Richard  Tuthill,  who  sailed  from  London  in  Apl,  1635,  in  the  ship 
Planter,  owned  land  at  Romney  Marsh  (Chelsea)  and  d  May  8,  1640, 
leaving  John  (b  1625)  who  m  Feb  10,  1647,  Mary  Holyoke.  THOMAS 
HUBBARD  (deacon)  died  in  Boston  Nov  7,  1717,  and  his  widow  Mary 
(Tuthill)  Hubbard  Aug  20,  1720.  Both  were  buried  in  the  Old  Granary 
Burying  Ground  on  Tremont  Street  in  Lot  158.  The  immense  brown- 
stone  slab  covering  their  tomb  has  on  it  a  coat-of-arms  said  to  be  a  Tut- 
hill coat.  Of  the  inscription  but  little  is  now  legible,  though  the  greater 
part  of  the  epitaph  has  been  preserved  in  Thomas  Bridgman's  book  of 
epitaphs.  Her  mother,  brother  Zechariah,  and  two  children  are  also 
buried  in  this  tomb.  Of  what  church  THOMAS  HUBBARD  was 
deacon  could  not  be  ascertained.  In  York  County  (Me)  Book  of  Deeds 
there  is  mention  made  May  15,  17 13,  of  John  Marion,  Josiah  Tay,  and 
Thomas  Hubbard,  "  Deacons  of  ye  sd  first  Church  in  Boston  "  buying 
property  there  in  trust  for  the  church,  of  Ephraim  Savage,  administrator 
of  the  estate  of  Richard  Wharton,  late  of  Boston.  This  would  appear 
to  be  this  same  Deacon  THOMAS  HUBBARD,  and  the  "  first  Church  " 
the  one  organized  by  Gov.  John  Winthrop,  Thomas  Dudley,  John  Wilson, 
and  Isaac  Johnson  in  1632,  corner  State  and  Devonshire  Streets,  Boston. 
The  fifth  building  succeeding  from  the  original  church  now  stands  at 
the  corner  of  Berkeley  and  Marlborough  Streets  and  the  denomination 
has  become  Unitarian.  A  search  of  these  records,  also  of  Old  South 
Church  and  Old  Christ  Church  (of  Paul  Revere  fame)  failed  to  show 
any  data  about  this  THOMAS  HUBBARD.  Much  was  discovered  in 
the  city  records  of  his  wife's  ancestry,  but  none  of  his.  From  this  we 
judge  that  his  ancestors  remained  in  England.  Children — Zechariah 
(became  a  hatter  in  Boston,  m  (1)  May  15,  1722,  Mary  Hobby,  d  1730, 
and  buried  by  Rev.  William  Cooper,  and  had  Mary,  b  Mch  5,  1722-3, 
Elizabeth,  b  Sep  26,  1725,  Zechariah,  b  June  24,  1728,  and  Charles  Hobby, 
b  Oct  16,  1730,  killed  in  the  Revolutionary  War  at  Montressor's  Island, 
N.Y.;  Zechariah  then  m  in  Boston  May  18,  1732,  Sarah  Kingman), 
John  (b  before  1700,  m  Nov  25,  1714,  Elizabeth  Gooch,  b  Mch  17,  1698, 
d  about  1 732,  dau  James  and  Elizabeth  (Peck)  Gooch.  He  was  a  wealthy 
feltmaker  and  mariner,  and  called  "captain,"   and,  with  his  brother 


EARLY  SETTLERS.  57 

Zechariah,  was  executor  of  his  mother's  will,  probated  Oct  3,  1720.     His 
will,  probated  Apl  9,  1734,  bequeathed  to  his  eldest  son  James  £10,  and 
to    Thomas,  Sarah,   Tuthill,  Joseph,  Susanna    and  Elizabeth  £$    each, 
balance  to  his  wife  Elizabeth,  sole  executrix;  inventory  ,£4606.  5.  3.,  in 
which  is  mentioned  "1  pr.  sconces   and  coat-of-arms,  £15."     Widow 
Elizabeth  (Gooch)  Hubbard  afterward  m  John  Franklin  (d  Jan  30,  1756) 
brother   of  Benjamin   Franklin,  America's   diplomat,  printer,  poet   and 
philosopher,  who  was  apprenticed  at  12  years  to  his  brother  James*  who 
bought  and  conducted  the  Boston  Nezcs  Letter  (established  in  1704)  and 
the  New  England  Lour  ant.     John  Franklin  was  Boston's  deputy  post- 
master in  1754.     He  was  a  tallow-chandler  and  lived  at  the  Hubbard 
Mansion  No.  45  Cornhill  Street,  which  went  to  her  son  James.     John 
and  Elizabeth  (Gooch)  Hubbard  had  children  (b  in  Boston)— James 
(b  Aug  14,  1715,  m  Nov  18,  1736,  Anna  Downe  and  had  James  b  Oct  18, 
1738),  Thomas  (b  July  1,  171 7,  d   1796,  called  "  innholder;"  possibly  he 
afterward  rem  to  Weston  and  was  executor,  Feb  14,  1786,  of  the  estate 
of  James  Gooch;  he  m  Judith  Ray,  second  dau   Simon  and  Deborah 
(Greene)  Ray  of  Block  Island,  and  had,  born  in  Boston,  Elizabeth,  b 
Feb  29,  1747-8,  d  y;  Simon  Ray,  b  Sep  19,  1749;  Deborah  and  Joseph 
Lorens,  twins,  b  Dec  13, 1750  [Joseph  Lorens  m  Sarah  Low  of  Gloucester, 
Mass.,  and  had  Judith  Ray,  who  m  George  Parsons  Sawyer  and  had 
Judith  Ray  Sawyer,  b  181 2,  d  Aug  1,  1871,  m  George  Howe  of  Boston. 
b  1809,  died  also  Aug  1,  187 1,  and  had  Caroline,  Annie  and  Florence], 
Gideon  Ray,  b  Sep  1,  1752;  Judith,  b  May  28,  1754;  Catherine,  b  May  22, 
1756;  Thomas,  b  June  10,  1758;  John,  b  Apl  22,  1759;  Susannah,  b  Jan 
31,  1761;  William,  b  Aug  12,  1762;  Samuel,  b  June  9,  1766;  and  Eliza- 
beth, b  May  24,  1770),  Sarah  (b  Feb  3,  1718,  unm  Jan  23,  1770;  called 
"  gentlewoman  "),  Tut  tie  (b  July  23,  1720,  became  a  prominent  merchant, 
and  was  postmaster  of  Boston  in  1770-1,  and  as  an  item  of  news  it  is 
related  that  he  charged  John  Hancock  for  postage  from  July  5,  177°,  to 
Jan  1,  1771,^3.  15-f.  11^.     He  probably  never  married.     Feb  8,  1808, 
Elizabeth  Partridge,  widow,  and  William  Gooch,  yeoman,  were  his  ad- 
ministrators;  the  inventory  consisted  of  house  and  land  in  Cornhill 
Street  worth  $13,500  and  three  stores  in  Merchants'  Row  on  State  Street 
worth  $40,000.     Total  assets,  $6  4,$9>j  .20),  Joseph  (b  Jan  l6>  J724),  Susanna 
(b  July  13,  1726,  m  Stephen  Bean),  Elizabeth]  (b  June  16,  1728,  m  Dec 

*  James  was  the  eldest,  and  Benjamin  the  youngest  son  of  Josias  and  his  second  wife  Abigail 
(Folger)  Franklin,  who  was  formerly  a  wool-dyer  in  Oxfordshire,  England,  and  later  a  tallow-chandler 
of  Boston,  Mass.,  on  the  site  of  the  Blue  Ball  Tavern  corner  Hanover  and  TTnion  Streets,  opposite  to  the 
Old  South  Church.  James  went  to  England  and  returned  from  there  in  1717  with  a  printing  press 
and  an  outfit  of  letters.  Dr.  Increase  Mather  and  the  clergy  drove  him  out  of  Massachusetts  He 
settled  in  Newport,  K.  I.,  and  issued  the  first  Almanac  there  in  1727,  also  the  Rhode  Island  Gazette  in 

t  She  inherited  considerable  property  from  her  mother  and  owned  a  house  in  Brookline,  Mass., 


5 8  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

13,  1768,  Capt  Samuel  Partridge,  widower,  "shopkeeper"  and  son  of 
Hon  George  Partridge  of  Danbury),  John  (b  June  8,  1729,  d  y)  and.  John 
(b  June  21,  1731).  Some  descendants  of  John  and  Elizabeth  (Gooch) 
Hubbard  are  now  living  in  Brookline,  Mass.,  so  the  compiler  has  been 
informed,  and  spell  their  name  "  Hubbart." 

WILMOTT  HUBBARD  {Marblchcad  Town  Records— Feb  26,  1667,  a 
site  for  the  town  was  made  and  among  the  charges  for  the  same  year  is 
the  following  :  "  Mor  for  Mester  Horberd  01.  10.  00."  This  is  not  con- 
clusive, however,  that  Mester  Horberd  lived  in  Marblehead.  In  a  list 
of  householders  taken  Oct  7,  1674,  there  appears  no  name  of  Hubbard, 
Hobart,  or  Horberd,  etc.]  appears  on  the  Marblehead  First  Church  rec- 
ords for  the  first  time  Oct  8,  1699,  when  he  had  a  child  baptized. 
There  are  no  real  estate  transactions  of  record  in  his  name  in  the  county 
which  might  disclose  his  identity.  He  may  have  been  of  the  Philip 
Hubbard  (Kittery,  Me.)  branch,  or  the  Richard  Hubbard  (Salisbury, 
Mass.)  branch.  The  names  Philip  and  Richard  both  appear  in  his  fam- 
ily. Still,  he  may  have  been  of  neither  line.  He  was  probably  a  fish- 
erman and  not  a  prominent  person.  Children  (bap  in  Marblehead  First 
Church) — Prudence  (bap  Oct  8,  1699,  adm  to  church  Jan  13,  1716-17,111 
Nov  5,  17 17,  Thomas  Furniss  of  Marblehead,  who  d  prior  to  Aug  5, 
1731;  wife  Prudence  administratrix,  inventory  ^268.  8;  they  had  chil- 
dren whose  names  are  unknown),  Philip  (bap  Aug  18,  1700  (probably 
an  adult),  mariner  and  fisherman.  Dec  2,  1703,  he  bought  for  ^10  a 
houselot  in  Marblehead  from  James  Fabius  and  wife  Joanna;  m  and  had 
Susannah,  whomDec  28, 1724,  Mark  Haskell,  of  Marblehead, son  of  Mark 
and  Charity  Haskell,  b  Aug  24, 1700,  d  before  May  19, 1755,  when  Susannah 
Haskell,  widow,  administered  upon  the  estate  of  her  father;  inventory, 

that  was  built  in  1735  and  remained  standing  until  1885.  When  her  stepfather,  John  Franklin,  died  in 
1756,  his  brother  Benjamin,  then  in  Philadelphia,  forwarded  to  her  the  following  letter  of  condolence  : 

"Philadelphia,  Feb.  23,  1750. 

"  To  Miss  Elizabeth  Hubbard,  Boston  :  I  condole  with  you.  We  have  lost  a  most  dear  and  valued 
relative.  But  it  is  the  will  of  God  and  Nature  that  these  mortal  bodies  be  laid  aside  when  the  soul  is 
to  enter  into  real  life.  This  is  rather  an  embryo  state— preparation  for  living.  A  man  is  not  com- 
pletely born  until  he  is  dead.  Why.  then,  should  we  grieve  that  a  new  child  is  born  among  the  im- 
mortals—a new  member  added  to  then-  happy  society. 

"We  are  spirits.  That  bodies  should  be  lent  us  while  they  can  afford  us  pleasure,  assist  us  in  ac- 
quiring knowledge,  or  in  doing  good  to  our  fellow  creatures,  is  a  kind  and  benevolent  act  of  God. 
When  they  become  unfit  for  their  purposes,  and  afford  us  pain  instead  of  pleasure,  instead  of  an  aid. 
become  an  encumbrance,  and  answer  none  of  the  intentions  for  which  they  were  given,  it  is  equally 
kind  and  benevolent  that  a  way  is  provided  by  which  we  may  get  rid  of  them.  Death  is  that  way. 
We  ourselves,  in  some  cases,  prudently  choose  a  partial  death.  A  mangled,  painful  limb,  which  can 
not  be  restored,  we  willingly  cut  off.  He  who  plucks  out  a  tooth  parts  with  it  freely,  since  the  pain 
goes  with  it,  and  he  who  quits  the  whole  body  parts  at  once  with  all  pains  and  diseases  which  it  is 
liable  to  or  capable  of  making  him  suffer.  Our  friend  and  we  were  invited  abroad  on  a  party  of 
pleasure  which  is  to  last  forever.  His  chaise  is  ready  first,  and  he  has  gone  before  us.  We  could  not 
all  conveniently  start  together,  and  why  should  you  and  I  be  grieved  at  this,  since  we  are  soon  to 
follow,  and  know  where  to  find  him  ?    Adieu,  B.Franklin." 


EARLY  SETTLERS. 


59 


£6$.  2.  4.;  Richard,  bap  Nov  18,  1711,  m  Sep  26,  1738,  Hannah  Pitman 
of  Marble-head  and  had  Hannah  bap  July  1,  1739,  who  m  Dec  25,  1759, 
George  Goudey  of  Marblehead;  Richard  was  a  fisherman  and  he  and  his 
wife  Hannah  and  Cornelius  Phillips  and  wife  Elizabeth  [PitmanJ  "  per- 
ambulate (?)  lands  formerly  owned  by  them  and  Mary  Shapley,  as 
heirs  of  John  Allen,  dec'd,  and  divided  in  1750  between  said  Elizb.  & 
Hannah,  1765  "),  Jane  (bap  Nov  15,  1702,  m  Dec  24,  17 19,  John  Merritt, 
of  Marblehead,  and  had  Sarah,  b  Aug  26,  1721;  Jane,  b  Aug  19,  1723,  d 
y;  Jane,  b  July  30,  1724;  and  Mary,  b  Aug  10,  1726),  John  (bap  June  25, 
1704.  It  would  appear  from  the  following  Essex  County  Probate  Rec- 
ords that  he  might  have  been  this  "John,"  and  have  removed  from 
Marblehead:  "John  Hubbard,  of  New  Haven,  &  Mary  his  W.  (who 
was  Mary  Coas,  wid.  &  relict  of  Sam'l  Coas,  of  Marblehead,  mariner), 
and  her  dau.  Mary  Coas,  now  of  New  Haven,  appoint  Rachel  Hubbard, 
of  New  Haven,  dau.  of  sd  Coas,  to  be  atty,  regarding  certain  tenement 
in  M'h'd.  Rachel  assigns  her  power  of  atty.  to  Nathan  Bowen,  or  Mar- 
blehead, 20  July,  1767."  The  stronger  probability  is,  though,  that  he 
is  the  John  mentioned  in  a  quitclaim  deed  acknowledged  May  20,  1732, 
"  from  Thomas  Swerett,  of  Marblehead,  fisherman,  to  my  daughter  De- 
liverance Hubbard,  wife  of  John  Hubbard,  of  Marblehead,  fisherman, 
land  in  Marblehead  &  house,"  in  consideration  of  his  "  love  and  affec- 
tion," etc.),  James  (bap  Mch  13,  1708-9;  no  further  traces),  Amos  (?),  son 
(possibly  one  of  two  latter  children:  "Marblehead  Births — 1707,  June 
20— Hubbard— female;  17  [?]  March  3— Hubbard— male;  171  [?]  Nov 
12 — Hubbard — male."  Amos  m  June  17,  1733,  Sarah  Russell,  of  Mar- 
blehead, and  was  admitted  to  church  Jan  20,  1733-4-  Oct  4,  1735,  he 
bought  for  £69  a  dwelling-house  and  lot  in  Marblehead  near  Windmill 
Hill  from  Thomas  and  Hannah  Cruff ;  he  was  a  mariner  and  a  fisherman 
and  died  before  Jan  14,  1744  (widow  Sarah  administratrix,  inventory 
^72.  2),  leaving  Sarah,  bap  Jan  27,  1733-4,  m  Mch  11,  1766,  Daniel  Kim- 
ball, of  Marblehead;  Philip,  bap  Sep  4,  1737,  m  June  24,  1756,  Sarah 
Brown,  of  Marblehead,  d  before  Oct  29,  1765,  widow  Sarah  administra- 
trix; inventory  £12.  2.  1.,  probably  had  children;  Wilmott,  bap  Dec  3, 
1738;  no  further  traces). 

The  compiler  is  unable  to  connect  further  the  members  of  this  branch, 
owing  to  the  incompleteness  of  the  Marblehead  records,  but  gives  the 
balance  in  disconnected  form:  First  Church  Records — baptized:  Wil- 
liam Herbert,  of  Elizabeth,  25  Aug,  1706.  Marblehead  Marriages  (all 
contracting  parties  being  of  Marblehead);  1739,  Apl  19,  Peter  Grealey 
and  Elizabeth  Hubbard;  1762,  Dec  7,  William  Pitman  and  Mary  Hub- 
bard; 1767,  Dec  29,  Amos  Hubbard  and  Tabitha  Bowden  [  181 1,  Jan  23, 
administration  of  estate  of  Amos  Hubbard,  late  of  Marblehead,  mariner, 


6o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

deceased,  granted  to  Elizabeth  Hubbard — possibly  a  daughter;  m  Sam- 
uel Smith — inventory,  $76.91.  1813,  Mch  10,  died  widow  Tabitha  Hub- 
bard]; 1769,  Aug  24,  Elkanah  Hitchins  and  Jane  Hubbard;  1772,  Feb 
20,  John  Dennis  and  Hannah  Hubbard;  Feb  3,  1776,  Joseph  Hibbert 
[Hubbard?]  and  Mary  Lyons;  1780,  July  9,  Captain  Joseph  (?)  Hibbert 
and  Mrs.  Anna  Dugard;  17S0,  Nov  5,  Richard  Hubbert  and  Mrs.  Sarah 
Thrasher;  1780,  Nov  9,  Samuel  Smith  and  Elizabeth  Hubbard;  1783, 
Feb  6,  Ebenezer  Hubbard  and  Abigail  Glover  [dau  Jonathan  Glover, 
brother  of  Gen.  John  Glover.  Ebenezer  Hubbard*  came  from  Reading, 
Me.;  pastor  Marblehead  First  Church  Sep  30,  1782;  ordained  Jan  1, 
1783;  died  Oct  15,  1800;  inventory  Oct  12,  1802,  by  Abigail  Hubbard, 
administratrix,  $337.09;  amount  of  debts,  $1,528.88.  Pastor  Marblehead 
M.  E.  Church  in  1804  was  Reuben  Hubbard  of  Marblehead];  1789,  Aug 
30,  John  Dennis  and  Lois  (?)  Hibbert;  Aug  3,  1794,  Amos  Hubbard 
and  Elizabeth  Bartlett  [Jan  23,  181 1,  administration  of  estate  of  Amos 
Hubbard,  late  of  Marblehead,  mariner,  deceased,  granted  to  Elizabeth 
Hubbard,  inventory  $76.91];  1802,  July  28,  Rev  Timothy  Flint  and 
Abigal  Hubbard;  1811,  Feb  10,  Benjamin  Eaton  and  Elizabeth  Hub- 
bard. 

*  He  may  have  descended  from  Richard  Hubbard  of  Salisbury,  Mass.,  but  the  compiler  can  not 
find  proof  of  it. 


EapLY  Hubbards  Defending    Their  Families  and  Fireside 


61 


DR.    WILLIAM    HENRY    HUBBARD 
of  Monmouth  County,  N.  J. 

(Descended  from  James  Hubbard  of  Gravesend,  L.  I.) 


62 


-*v 


pIsHefraii^oUMs^f  Gravesend. 


Pride  of  ancestry  is  a  natural  and  ennobling  sentiment :  and  the  man  who  does  not  feel  it  will 
contribute  nothing  of  which  posterity  will  be  able  to  boast —  Thomas  Kinsella. 


JAMES  HUBBARD,  youngest  of  eleven  children  (four  of  whom  were 
named  William — born  1592  ;  John — born  1598  ;  Henry — born  1605, 
and  Margaret),  was  born  in  16 13,  and  was  the  son  of  Henry  Hubbard 
(b  1570,  yeoman,  of  Langham,  Rutland  County,  England)  and  Margaret 
Hubbard.  He  arrived  in  America  about  1637  and  settled  at  Charles- 
town,  Mass.,  where  he  owned  "  a  house  and  lott."  He  soon,  however, 
removed  to  Lynn,  Mass.  The  colonial  records,  dated  December  1, 1640, 
show  that  he  was  once  tried  for  "  assault,"  viz.,  "  JAMES  HUBBARD  is 
discharged,  the  hurt  being  little  and  done  unwiting,  the  other  presseing 
upon  him."  In  the  Salem  Court,  1640-41,  he  was  a  juryman,  being  sued 
also  in  that  court  in  1642-43.  In  1643  his  property  in  Charlestown  was 
deeded  to  R.  Lowden  and  Thomas  Wilder  through  his  attorney,  Edward 
Tomlyns.  About  this  period  he  removed  to  Long  Island  with  many 
other  families  holding  anabaptist  and  other  religious  doctrines  odious  to 
the  rulers  of  the  Massachusetts  Bay  Colony.  Among  these  migrators 
was  a  famous  and  beautiful  lady  of  high  rank,  remarkable  virtues  and 
noble  Christian  character,  Lady  Deborah  Moody,*  accompanied  by  her 
son.  Sir  Henry  Moody.  She,  her  son,  Ensign  George  Baxter,  and  Ser- 
geant JAMES  HUBBARD  were  granted  land  December  19,  1645,  where 
is  now  the  town  of  Gravesend.  This  town  was  laid  out  by  JAMES 
HUBBARD,  "  a  surveyor  by  trade,"  who  in  January,  1648,  was  elected 
"  scout,"  a  position  at  that  belligerent  period  of  considerable  importance. 
This  action  was  because  he  was  "  a  man  as  had  been  seen  of  great 
respectability  and  influence."     He  owned  a  "  plantation  lot  "  in  Graves- 

*  Daughter  of  Walter  Dunck,  Esq.,  of  Avebury,  Wiltshire.    She  married  Henry  Moody,  Esq.,  of 
Garesden,  Wiltshire,  who  was  created  Baron  in  1621-22,  and  died  in  1632. 

63 


64 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GEN  J:  A  LOGY. 


end,  but  how  much  other  land  is  unknown,  though  it  is  known  that  he 
had  "  176  acres  at  the  head  of  Fresh  Kil,  on  Staten  Island."  His  Long 
Island  land  was  obtained  from  the  Indian  Chief  "  Pamamora,"  and  the 
confirmation*  of  this  patent  by  Governor  Richard  Nicholls  of  New  York 
was  made  out  to  "  J E AMES  HUBBARD,  John  Brown,  Job  Tilton,  Jr., 
Richard  Stout  and  William  Goulding-,"  and  recorded  at  Albany,  X.  Y., 
Feb.  25,  1664-5.  An  additional  confirmation*  was  given  by  Governor 
Francis  Lovelace  July  1,  1670,  who  appointed  as  commissioners  to  report 
title  "  Mathias  Nicholls,  JEAMES  HUBBARD,  Jacques  Cortelyou, 
Elbert  Elbertson  and  Elias  Doughty." 

JAMES  HUBBARD  was  termed  "  Sergeant,"  and  Apl  12,  1646,  John 
Underhill  sued  him  for"  hireing  his  servant  man  ;"  in  1650-1-3  he  was  a 
magistrate  for  Gravesend,  Kings  Co.,  L.-I.     February  20,  1653,  he  sold 
by  his  agent  and  assignee,   Daniel   King,  of  Lynn,  merchant,  for  £S, 
eleven   acres   of   land  to  Allen   Bread,   of    Lynn,   Mass.,  husbandman. 
November  26,  1653,  he  represented  Gravesend  at  New  Amsterdam  "  to 
devise  and  recommend  measures  for  the  public  security,  and  to  put  a 
stop  to  the  piracies  and  robberies  of  one  Thomas  Baxter."     History 
says  also  that  "  he  rebelled  with  a  George  Baxter  and  Grover,  July  27, 
1655,  against  the  Dutch  authorities  and  was  imprisoned."     Apl  18,  1663, 
proceedings  were  begun   by   the    "  Town   of    Utrecht   against   James 
Hubbard  for  trespass."     December   10,    1663,  he  was  a  delegate  to  a 
meeting  "  to  represent  the   state  of  the  country  to   the   authorities  in 
Holland,  Europe,"  also  held  at  New  Amsterdam.     He  frequently  clashed 
with  the  Dutch  Governor,  and  it  was  generally  the  personal  influence  of 
Lady  Deborah  Moody  that  permitted  him  to  retain  public  office.     He 
endeavored  at  one  time  to  enlist  the  protection  of  Connecticut  as  an 
Englishman,  to  guard  his  rights,  was  thus  recognized  and  made  "  Com- 
missioner "  from  that  Colony  May  12,  1664,  together  with  Mr.  William 
Wilkins,  both  of  "  Graves-inn."     In  1654  he  was  the  town  assessor.     "  In 
1655  he  had  a  wife  Martha."     No  record  of  any  issue.     December  31, 
1664,  he  married  Elizabeth  Bailes  (or  Bayles),  who  died  in  Gravesend  in 
1693.     JAMES  is  supposed  to  have  died  before  that  time.     Children— 
James  (see  following),  Rebecca  (b  Apl   28,  1667),  Elizabeth  (b  June  3, 
1669),  John  (b  Mch  20,  1670,  was  living  in  Gravesend  in  1695),  Elias  (b 
Apl  11,  1673,  farmer  in  Gravesend,  m  Dec   15,  1699,  Jannetje  b  May  3, 
1676,  widow  of  Jan  Barentze  Van  Driest),  Samuel,  supposed  son  (b  May 
3,  1676),  and  Hannah,  supposed  dau  (m  Myndert  Johnson). 

JAMES,  eldest  son  of  James  and  Elizabeth  (Bayles)  Hubbard,  was  born 
Dec  10,  1665,  in  Gravesend.  He  married  Rachel  Bergen,  and  after  1698  left 

*  These  "  confirmations  "  were  introduced  by  rapacious  English  Governors  in  order  to  extort 
illegal  fees  from  Holland's  subjects. 


LONG  ISLAND  HUB  BARDS.  65 

Gravesend  and  settled  in  Middletown,  Monmouth  Co.,  X.  J.,  where  he 
bought  land  of  a  Mr.  Stout.  His  will,  dated  Jan  30,  17 18-9,  was  pro- 
bated Jan  16,  1723-4.  Children — Imbecile  son  (b  1686,  d  1764,  leaving 
no  issue  ?)  Mary  (b  abt  1689,  m  John  Wall  of  Middletown  and  had  Wil- 
liamje,  Rachel  and  Mary?),  Elias  (m  vSep  29,  1723,  Femmetje  Ditmars, 
b  May  23,  1707,  dau  Lawrence  Ditmars),  and  James  (see  following). 

JAMES*  youngest  son  of  James  and  Rachel  (Bergen)  Hubbard,  was 
born  June  18,  1706,  and  married  Sep,  1729,  Altje  Ryder,  b  Mch  12,  17 12. 
Children — Johanna  (b  Aug  30,  1730,  d  Nov  24,  1740),  Benardus  (b  Feb 
1,1732,  m  Nov  iS,  1756,  Neeltie  Lake),  Elizabeth  (b  1733,  d  Mch  21, 
1740),  Ariantje  (b  1735,  d  Oct  5,  1735),  Ariantje  (b  Dec  7,  1736,  m  Nov, 
1765,  Jacobus  Lake),  Phebe  (b  Aug  1,  1739,  d  Nov  29,  1740),  Samuel  (b 
Apl  28,  1742,  d  Feb  30,  1835,  m  Anne  Van  Brunt,  d  Dec,  1834),  Johanna 
(b  July  28,  1748),  Stephen  (b  May  23,  1752,  d  Mch  22,  1819,  m  Maria 
Ryder),  James  (bap  Mch  25,  1764,  d  1799),  Elias  (b  Feb  13,  1746,  in  Flat- 
lands,  d  Dec  31,  1832,  m  Mrs.  Margaret  (Lake)  Blauw,  b  Feb  28,  1748 
(?  July,  1739),  d  Oct  15,  1825,  widow  of  Cornelius  Blauw,  and  had 
Catherine,  b  Dec  4,  1774,  d  Apl  22,  1856,  m  Michael  Sice,  of  New  York 
City;  Polly,  b  Nov  28,  1778,  d  Mch  12,  1866,  m  John  S.  Bergen;  and  Elias, 
b  in  Flatlands  Dec  1,1776,  d  Apl  19,  1864,  m  Jan  14,  180 1,  Huldah  Holmes 
of  Monmouth  Co.,  N.  J.,  b  Oct  29,  1779,  d  Apl  4,  1851,  and  had  Ellen*  b 
Jan  28,  1803,  m  Dec  7,  1820,  Nicholas  R.  Van  Brunt  of  New  Utrecht, 
and  later  of  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.;  Sarah,  b  May  22,  1805,  d  July  3,  1867,  m 
Garret  P.  Conover  of  New  Jersey,  b  June  4,  1804,  d  Mch  12,  1873,  and 
had  Mary,  Huldah  m  Elias  Dayton,  Katherine  m  Henry  W.  Johnson^ 
Ellen,  Sarah  m  Garret  G.  Bergen,  Margaretta  m  William  H.  Wikoff, 
Williampe,  Garret  m  Louise  Hall  ;  Elias  H.,  b  Sep  26,  1807,  d  Sep  5, 
1845,  m  Mch  4,  1833,  Ida  Barkeloo,  and  had  Huldah,  Elizabeth,  Maria, 
and  Barkeloo,  who  m  Margaret  McKay  of  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.;  Asher 
Holmes,  b  Nov  17,  1809,  m  Oct  27,  1840,  Catherine  Amelia  Pearsall  and 
had  Elias,  Timothy,  Anne  who  m  Jacob  Remsen,  and  James  who  m 
Emma  Wykoff  of  Flatlands,  L.  I.,  and  had  Asher,  James,  Abby  and 
Leonard  ;  John  H.,  b  Mch  29,  1812,  d  unm  in  1830  ;  Margaret,  b  Jan  18, 
1815,  m  May  10,  1848,  Peter  P.  Conover  of  Keyport,  N.  J.;  James,  b  Feb 
19,  181 7,  unm  ;  Mary,  b  Jan  23, 1819,  d  Oct  5,  1855,  m  Oct  14,  1841,  Garret 
G.  Bergen  ;  Catherine  Holmes,  b  Apl  8, 1821,  d  Dec  5, 1825)  ;  and  Jaco- 
bus  (see  following). 

JACOBUS,  eighth  child  of  James  and  Altje  (Ryder)  Hubbard,  was 
born  May  23,  1744,  and  died  in  Holmdel,  Monmouth  Co.,  N.  J.,  Aug  18, 
1807.  He  was  indentured  "  unto  William  Clark  of  Freehold,  in  Mon- 
mouth County  in  East  New  Jerseys,  Doctor  and  Surgeon,  to  be  taught 
in  the  said  practice  of  a  Doctor  and   Surgeon,  and  in  all  the  several 

*  See  end  of  this  Chapter  for  more  correct  and  complete  data. 


66  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

branches  of  Physics  which  the  said  William  Clark  practiced  within  the 
said  town  *  *  *  He  shall  not  contract  matrimony  within  the  said 
term.  At  cards,  dice,  or  any  other  unlawful  game  he  shall  not  play,  nor 
hant  Ale  houses  or  Taverns,"  etc.  He  was  a  successful  physician  and 
surgeon  in  his  vicinity,  of  distinguished  appearance,  and  a  surgeon  in 
the  Revolutionary  War.  An  oil  painting  of  him  is  owned  by  his  great 
grandson,  Dr.  Charles  Hubbard  of  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.  Nov  17,  1765,  he 
married  Rebecca  Swart,  b  Nov  22,  1739,  d  April  8,  1819,  of  Holmdel 
descended  from  Jacob  Swart,  who  came  from  Holland  and  was  a  free- 
holder in  Gravesend,  L.  I.,  in  1650.  Dr.  HUBBARD  resided  upon  his 
wife's  farm  and  was  there  buried.  Afterward  his  remains  were  removed 
to  Fairview  Cemetery,  near  Red  Bank,  N.  J.,  where  an  old  brownstone 
slab  marks  his  burial  place.  Children — Gertrude  (b  June  28,  1768,  d 
July  26,  1778,  of  asthma),  Jacobus  (b  Apl  23,  1774,  d  Feb  25,  1847,  a  suc- 
cessful practitioner  of  medicine  in  Tinton  Falls,  N.  J.,  m  (1)  Katie 
Hendrickson,  who  bore  a  son  and  both  died  ;  after  31  years  he  m  (2) 
Charlotte  Corlies),  Tunis  (b  Mch  10,  1775,  lived  in  Middletown,  N.  J.,  d 
Jan  15,  1853,  m  Margaret  Conover  and  had  Cornelius,  who  m  Rose 
McKiernan,  Gertrude  Jane,  who  m  Rev.  James  Stevenson,  and  William 
Henry,h  1806  in  Middletown,  N.  J.,  m  abt  1827  Jane  Morrell,  removed  to 
Minaville,  N.  Y.,  and  had  Teunis  b  1828,  m  Catherine  Hubbard  and  rem 
to  Sandusky,  Ohio  ;  John  b  1830,  m  Emma  Morrell,  lived  in  Minaville, 
and  had  William,  b  abt  1870  ;  Eleanor  b  1831,  m  Edward  Riggs;  Susan 
b  1834,  m  Thomas  Wayne  ;  Margaret  b  1836,  m  John  Sherburne  ;  Ger- 
trude b  1840;  Rebecca  b  1842,  m  Sanford  Van  Derzee  ;  Henrietta  b 
1844,  m  Alfred  McDonald  ;  James  b  1845,  m  Anne  Thayer,  rem  to  Chi- 
cago and  had  Teunis,  William,  Emma  and  John;  Adele  b  1845,  m 
Michael  Russell  ;  and  Thomas  b  1 849,  m  Eliza  Wetherell  and  rem  to 
Cleveland,  Ohio)  Eleanor  (b  1778,  d  Feb  17,  i860),  Samuel  (b  July  10, 
1779,  d  Mch  29,  1848,  m  Feb  16,  181 8,  Margaret  Stoutenborough,  b  Apl 
25,  1794,  d  Nov  10,  1874,  dau  John  Stoutenborough,  and  had  Rebecca,  b 
July  30,  1819,  cl  Feb  26,  1888;  Catherine  Hendrickson,  b  Apl  28,  1822; 
James,  b  Sep  29,  1823,  in  Monmouth  County,  N.  J.,  m  Mch  25,  1856, 
Jane  Rebecca  Bannan,  b  in  N.  Y.  City  Mch  2,  1832,  dau  William  and 
Rachel  Gordon  (Miller)  Bannan;  they  live  in  Red  Bank,  N.  J.,  where 
their  four  children  were  all  born,  viz.:  Agnes  Frear,  b  Aug  23,  1858,  m 
Oct  6,  1885,  Francesco  Bianchi  Tompkins,  a  N.  Y.  broker,  b  Apl  28,  i860 
and  had  Madeline  Bianchi,  b  May  22,  1888;  Isabelle  Miller,  b  Mch  17 
1861,  d  July  16,  1878;  Alice  Bartley,  b  Oct  15,  1864,  m  June  6,  1888 
Charles  Jonathan  Smith,  b  Dec  12,  i860;  and  Anna  Grant,  b  June  11 
1869,  m  Sep  25,  1894,  Hetzel  Reviere  Sneden;  John  Anthony,  b  July  26 
1828;    Henry  Crochcron,  b  Mch  20,  1831,  d  Aug  2,  1874,  and  Charlotte 


LONG  I  SLA  XI)   IIL  BEARDS. 


67 


Corlies,  b  May  18,  1833),  John  (b  Feb  29,  1784,  in  Monmouth  Co.,  N.  J., 
d  Apl  23,  i860,  in  N.  Y.  City,  m  Mrs.  Nellie  (Shepherd)  Augustin,  widow, 
b  in  Bound  Brook,  X.  J.,  d  in  X.  Y.  City  Feb  26,  1865,  and  had  Katherine, 
who  m  Col  Joseph  L.  Chester  of  Conn,  (who  d  in  England,  his  tablet 
being-  in  Westminster  Abbey),  and  had  Anna  Chester  who  m  Herman 
Hag-er,  (deceased)  and  Mary  who  m  Thomas  A.  Becket  of  Phila,  Pa.,  and 
had  three  children;  Elizabeth  R,  b  in  X.  Y.  City  Apl  26,  1825,  m  abt 
1S46  Dr  C.  A.  Ficht,  b  in  Worms,  Germany,  Jan  27,  1819,  live  in  Mont- 
clair,  X.  J.,  and  had  Lelia,  b  in  X.  Y.  City  Apl  12,  1847,  m  E.  F.  Ran- 
dolph and  had  Raymond  B  and  Edward;  Ralph  M.,  b  in  X.  Y.  City  Jan 
30,  1S49,  lives  in  Denver,  Col,  m  Xellie  Messier  of  Evanston,  Wyoming, 
and  had  Ralph,  Louise,  and  Lelia;  Spencer  S,  b  in  X.  Y.  City  Oct  2, 
1S52;  Anna  and  William  C,  d  y;  Anna  Gertrude,  b  in  X.  Y.  City  Feb  3, 
1855,  m  Charles  Augustus  Hutchings  of  X.  Y._  and  had  Clifford  F.  H. 
and  Roger  Chadwick;  and  Frederick  P,  b  in  X.  Y.  City  Feb  13,  1863; 
and  Charlotte  Corlies ,  b  abt  1827  in  X.  Y.  City,  m  (1)  William  Fithian  of 
Newark,  X.  J.,  and  had  Ellen;  m  (2)  Duncan  Campbell  of  West  Hoboken, 
X.  J.)  and  Elias  (see  following). 

ELIAS,  youngest  son  of  Dr.  Jacobus  and  Rebecca  (Swart)  Hubbard, 
was  born  Dec  18,  17S1,  and  died  April  12,  1867.  He  lived  in  Holmdel, 
Monmouth  County,  X.  J.,  and  m  Eleanor  Hendrickson,  who  d  Feb  17, 
i860.  Children — William  Henry  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line  Dr. 
Charles  Hubbard,  Brooklyn,  X.  Y.),  James  Dexise  (see  following),  Tunis 
(b  Feb  14,  1S15,  m  Catherine  Coombs,  rem  to  Amsterdam,  X.  Y.),  John  S. 
(b  Feb  7,  1822,  m  Sarah  Sherman),  Mary  G.  (b  abt  1830),  and  Elias  (b 
Sep  7,  1836,  m  Addie  Tilton). 

JAMES  DEXISE,  son  of  Elias  and  Eleanor(Hendrickson)Hubbard, 
born  in  Holmdel,  MonmoiUh  Co.,  X.  J.,  Sep  30,  1S12,  two  hours  after  the 
birth  of  his  brother,  William  Henry,  whose  birth  is  recorded  as  of  Sep 
29,  1812.  Children — Elizabeth  Grover  (b  in  Holmdel,  X.  ].,  Mch  24, 
1838,  m  Feb  5,  1856,  Walter  Harbor  Lockwood  Morton,  b  in  Ocean  Co., 
X.  J.,  Mch  21,  1832,  son  of  David  and  Hester  (Hagaman)'  Morton,  and 
had  Charles  Hubbard,  b  Nov  9,  1857,  d  Feb  1,  1858;  Cornelia  Anna,  b 
June  19,  i860,  m  Feb  21,  1888,  Louis  W.  Neumann  of  Xewark,  X.  J.,  and 
lives  at  Red  Bank;  and  Elwood  Stoles,  b  Jan  1,  187 1,  gr  June  19,  1S94, 
X.  Y.  Coll  Physicians  and  Surgeons),  Joseph  (b  1840,  d  1841),  Deborah 
Grover  (b  Sep  1,  1843,  in  Holmdel,  lives  in  Xew  Brunswick,  X.  J.,  m 
Mch  16,  1863,  at  Dayton,  X.  J.,  Xelson  Stryker  Rowland,  b  Aug  9,  1843, 
at  Monmouth  Junction,  X.  J.,  d  May  2,  1S74,  at  Spotswood,  XT.  J.,  son 
of  James  and  Elizabeth  (McDowell)  Rowland  of  Monmouth,  Middle- 
sex Co.,  X.  J.,  and  had  Beulah  Hubbard,  b  June  19,  1S64,  d  in  Brooklyn, 
X.  Y.,  July  5,  1865),  Eleaxor  (b  Sep  1,  1843,  d  y),  Johx  (b  Mch  21,  1845, 


68  HUBBARD   HISTORY  AND   G  EXE  A  LOGY. 

in  Holmdel,  lives  at  Asbury  Park,  N.  J.,  m  at  Dayton,  Middlesex  Co., 
N.  J.,  Oct.  9,  1872,  Alice  Thomas,  b  in  Greenpoint,  N.  Y.,  1852,  dau  of 
Richard  (of  Utica,  N.  Y.)  and  Sarah  (Jacobus)  Thomas  of  Hackensack, 
N.  J.,  and  had  Walter  Thomas,  b  July  2,  1S75,  at  Dayton,  and  Alice 
Thomas,  b  Apl  12,  1889,  at  Asbury  Park),  Joseph  (b  at  Atlantic  High- 
lands, in  Nov,  1848,  d  Feb,  1850),  James  (b  June,  1850,  d  Nov,  1850), 
Cornelia  Anna  (b  July  5,  1854,  in  Shrewsbury,  N.  J.,  d  at  Dayton,  May 
11,  1856),  Ella  (b  at  Dayton  June  29,  1856,  m  May  22,  1881,  at  English- 
town,  N.  J.,  George  Hunt,  son  of  John  E.  Hunt,  of  Manalapan,  N.  J., 
and  had  George  Wilson,  b  at  Somerville,  N.  J.,  Sep  10,  1882;  Alice,  b  at 
Englishtown  Mch  12,  1884;  Linwood  Baird,  b  at  Asbury  Park  July  7, 
1889,  d  Dec  11,  1893;  and  Wilson  G.,  b  at  Asbury  Park  Jan  13,  1894),  and 
Samuel  (b  at  Dayton  Mch  31,  1858,  m  Mary  Robinson  of  New  Bruns- 
wick, N.  J.,  dau  Frederick  and  Theodosia  Robinson  of  England,  and  had 
Grace  Eleanor,  b  Sep  1,  1881,  at  New  Brunswick;  Bculah,  b  Jan  13,  1885, 
at  New  Brunswick;  and  Frederick  D  arise,  b  Dec  6,  1888). 

ADDENDA— Since  page  C5  was  electrotyped,  Mr.  Francis  Henry  Bergen  of  New  Brighton,  Staten 
Island,  lias  furnished  the  following,  most  of  which  was  compiled  by  his  uncle,  the  late  Teunis  G.  Bergen 
of  New  Utrecht,  Long  Island,  an  excellent  historian  and  genealogist. 

ELLEN,  b  Jan  28,  1803,  dau  Elias  and  Huldah  (Holmes)  Hubbard, 
m  Dec  7,  1820,  Nicholas  R.  Van  Brunt.  Children — Lemma  Ann  (b  Nov 
30,  1821,  d  May  1,  1 85 1,  m  June  11,  1844,  John  D.  Poe),  Huldah  Holmes 
(b  July  21,  1823,  m  May  28,  1840,  (1)  John  J.  Dean,  m  Sep  17,  1850,  (2) 
Hawley  D.  Clapp),  Ellen  Elizabeth  (b  May  5,  1825,  d  Jan  6,  1850,  m 
Dec  8,  1846,  Edward  Kissam),  Rutger  N.  (b  Mch  8,  1827,  m  Mch  1,  1861, 
Emma  Elliot,  b  Apl  3,  1829),  Mary  Jane  (b  Apl  3,  1829,  unm),  Sarah 
Holmes  (b  Oct  29,  1831,  d  June  4,  1862,  m  Feb  23,  1854,  Daniel  Cashman), 
Elias  H.  (b  Dec  10,  1835,  unm),  Henry  Clay  (b  Oct  2,  1837,  d  Aug  26, 
1838),  Emmeline  P.  (b  Dec  11,  1839,  d  Jan  3>  l849)  an<^  Nicholas  R.  (b 
Apl  28,  1847,  d  Aug  23,  1847). 

SARAH,  b  May  22,  1805,  dau  Elias  and  Huldah  (Holmes)  Hubbard, 
m  Jan  25,  1825,  Garret  P.  Conover.  Children — Mary  Rue  (b  Sep  24, 
1825,  unm),  Huldah  Holmes  (b  Feb  21,  1828,  m  Dec  8,  1848,  Elias  H. 
Dayton  and  had  Mary  and  Ruth),  Catherine  Ann  (b  Sep  28,  1830,  m 
June  10,  1858,  Henry  William  Johnson  and  had  Ann,  Sarah,  May  and 
Edith),  Ellen  (b  Oct  27,  1832,  unm),  Sarah  (b  Jan  25,  1835,  m  Apl  17, 
1861  (2d  wife)  Garret  G.  Bergen,  and  had  Francis  Henry,  b  May  14, 
1863,  m  Apl  22,  1890,  Meta  Benjamin  Johnson  and  had  Ruth  Seymour,  b 
Mch  17,  1893;  and  John  Watson  Holmes,  b  Nov  6,  1864,  m  Oct,  1893, 
Mary  Remsen  Lyman),  Margaretta  (b  Mch  28,  1837,  m  Dec  2,  1857, 
William  Henry  Wikoff  and  had  Henry  Conover  who  m  Ellen  Conover, 


LONG  ISLAND  HUBBARD S. 


69 


and  Frederick  Dayton  who  m  Laura  Morford),  Garret  Van  Doren  (b 

Nov  11,  1844,  m  Louise  Hall)  and  Williampe,  twin  (b  Nov  n,  1844,  unm). 

ELI  AS  II.,  b  Sep  26,  1807,  d  wSep  5,  1845,  son  Elias  and  Huldah 
(Holmes)  Hubbard,  m  Mch  4,  1S33,  Ida  Barkeloo,  b  June  1,  1808.  Chil- 
dren— Harmanus  Barkkloo,  who  m  Margaret  McKay,  and  had  Mar- 
garet, Samuel,  and  Kittie,  and  Huldah. 

ASHER  HOLMES,  b  Nov  17,  1809,  son  of  Elias  and  Huldah 
(Holmes)  Hubbard,  m  Oct  27,  1840,  Catharine  Anne  Pearsall.  Chil- 
dren— Elias,  unm;  James,  m  Emma  Wykoff;  Anne,  m  Jacob  Remsen; 
Huldah,  m  Robert  Stewart,  and  Timothy,  unm. 

JOHN  H.,  b  Mch  28,  1812,  son  of  Elias  and  Huldah  (Holmes)  Hub- 
bard, d  unm  at  sea  in  July,  1867. 

MARGARET,  b  Jan  18,  1815,  dau  Elias  and  Huldah  (Holmes)  Hub- 
bard, m  May  10,  1848,  (2d  wife)  Peter  P.  Conover  of  New  Jersey 
Children — William,  Huldah  (m  Charles  Schenck)  and  Lisle. 

JAMES,  b  Feb  19,  1817,  son  Elias  and  Huldah  (Holmes)  Hubbard, 
unm. 

MARY,  b  Jan  23,  1819,  dau  Elias  and  Huldah  (Holmes)  Hubbard,  m 
Oct  14,  1 841,  (1st  wife)  Garret  G.  Bergen.  Children — Tunis  G.  (b  May 
17,  1S47,  m  Caroline  McPhail),  Huldah  Holmes  (b  Feb  11,  185 1,  m 
Oct  1,  1891,  C.  E.  Brown,  b  Sep  3,  1845),  Mary  Jane  (b  Dec  16,  1854,  d 
Aug  23,  1855),  Ella  (b  Jan  1,  1856,  d  July  19,  1856)  and  Elias  H.  (b  Nov 
17,  1858,  d  Dec  30,  1S58). 

CATHERINE  HOLMES,  b  Apl  8,  1821,  dau  Elias  and  Huldah 
(Holmes)  Hubbard,  d  Dec  5,  1825. 

Mrs.  Judge  Charles  H.  Conover,  of  Freehold,  N.  J.,  has  proven  the  historian  and  genealogist. 
Tennis  G.  Bergen  (deceased),  to  have  been  in  error  in  chronicling  JAMES,  son  of  James  and  Rachel 
(Bergen)  Hubbard  and  grandson  of  James  and  Elizabeth  (Bayles)  Hubbard,  as  the  progenitor  of  this 
branch  of  the  Long  Island  Hubbards.  She  possesses  the  will  of  James  Hubbard  who  married  Rachel 
Bergen.  It  is  dated  Jan  30, 1718,  and  was  probated  in  1723.  It  leaves  one-half  to  his  wife  Rachel  and 
the  other  half  in  trust  to  his  son  James.  His  brothers  Elias  and  Samuel  are  named  the  executors. 
After  the  death  of  his  son  JAMES  this  half  is. to  revert  to  his  (son  JAMES)  sister  Mary,  wife  of  John 
Wall,  if  living;  if  dead,  to  her  daughters,  Williampe.  Rachel  and  Mary  Wall.  There  is  no  mention 
whatever  in  the  will  of  any  other  children  or  grandchildren.  From  the  fact  that  the  son's  share  was 
left  in  trust  with  no  provision  for  possible  issue  by  him,  it  is  conjectured  that  he  was  an  imbecile.  If 
that  deduction  is  correct,  this  branch  then  expired  in  the  male  line,  and  the  present  generations  of 
Long  Island  Hubbards  descended  through  one  of  the  brothers  of  James  Hubbard  who  married  Rachel 
Bergen.    These  brothers  were  named  John,  Elias  and  Samuel,  and  Elias  was  in  all  probability  the  one. 


THEODORE    SEDGWICK    HUBBARD 
of  Geneva,  N.  Y. 

(Descended  from  William  Hnlbard  of  Dorchester  and  Northampton,  Mass  ) 


7° 


There  is  a  moral  and  philosophical  respect  for  our  ancestors  which  elevates  the  character  and  im- 
proves the  heart— Daniel  Webster. 


WILLIAM  HULBERD  (Hulbard  Hulbert.  Hulburt,  Hulburd,  etc.),  came  from  England  (Northum- 
berland County?)  to  Dorchester,  Mass.,  and  applied  for  freemanship  Oct.  19,  1630— made  freeman 
Apl  3, 1632.  (The  compiler  of  the  Thomas  Hurlbut— Saybrooke,  Ct.,  1635 -Genealogy  discovered  no 
relationship  between  this  Thomas  and  William.)  He  lived  in  Dorchester  until  1635-6,  when  he  sold 
out  and  removed  to  Windsor,  Ct.  He  there  lived  on  "Backer  Row"  until  the  Pequot  War  of  1637, 
when  he,  for  consideration  of  safety,  moved  into  the  "public  palisado."  Land  was  apportioned  to 
him  in  1640.  By  his  first  wife  (no  record)  he  had  John  (see  following),  William  (m  (1)  Ruth  Salmon  (2) 
Mary  Howard),  Hannah  (lived  in  Northampton,  New  Haven,  and  died  in  Enfield,  Ct.),  Abigail  (no  re- 
cord), Sara  (b  July  10,  1647),  and  Anna  (bap  Mch  17,  1648-9).  In  April,  1648,  Samuel  Allen  died  and 
WILLIAM  HULBERD  married  his  widow,  who  had  Samuel,  Nehemiah,  John,  Rebecca,  Mary  (d  y), 
and  Obadiah  Allen.  In  1657  he  removed  to  Northampton,  Mass.,  and  there  died  in  1694.  His  eldest 
(?)  son— 

JOHN  HULBERD  married  in  1671  Mary  Baker  (d  1707),  and  died  in 
17 13.  Children — John  (see  following),  James  (d  y),  Samuel  (d  unm 
in  1748),  Mary  (m  1711  Thomas  Ponder  of  Westfield,  Mass.),  and  James 
(m  1732  Mary  Ganston,  d  1767  in  Northampton,  and  had  Mary  b  1733, 

fames  b  1735,  John  b  1737,  m  Susannah  ,  and  Hepzibah  b    1740). 

His  eldest  son — 

JOHN  HULBERD  was  born  in    1676  and  died  in  1737.     Hemarried 

Ruth ,  who  died  March   27,   1720.     Children — Daniel   (supposed 

son — see  following). 

DANIEL  HULBERD,  the  supposed  son  of  John  and  Ruth  Hulberd, 
was  adopted  by  Thomas  Ponder  and  Mary  (Hulberd)  Ponder  of  "West- 
field,  Mass.,  and  was  born  in  17 14  in  Westfield,  where  in  1736  he  mar- 
ried Naomi  Root.  In  1759  he  removed  to  Pittsfield,  Mass.,  where  he  was 
generally  known  as  Captain  DANIEL  HUBBARD.  The  change  in  the 
spelling  from  Hulberd  or  Hulburd  to  HUBBARD  now  takes  place,  and 
for  what  reason  can  not  at  this  late  period  be  determined.  Correct 
spelling  was  not  then  deemed  of  much  importance.  His  children  bore 
the  name  "  Hubbard  "  thereafter.     He  was  a  surveyor,  Revolutionary 


72  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   G  EXE  A  LOGY. 

War  soldier,  one  of  the  orignal  eight  members  of  the  Pittsfield  Church 
(organized  in  1763),  and  died  of  "camp  fever  and  hard  labor."  It  is 
claimed  that  all  his  four  sons  and  five  sons-in-law  were  Revolutionary 
soldiers.  Two  of  his  sons,  Capt.  Danif.l,  Jr.,  and  Lieut.  James  Hub- 
bard, with  their  wives,  are  buried  in  Pittsfield  Cemetery.  There  also  is 
buried  DANIEL  and  his  wife.  A  handsome  marble  shaft  in  "  Saints 
Rest  "  is  thus  inscribed:  "  This  monument  is  erected  in  memory  of 
Capt  DANIEL  HUBBARD,  who  died  December  19,  1777,  in  the  64th 
year  of  his  age;  also  Mrs.  Naomy,  his  relict,  who  died  January  29,  1800, 
aged  82.  They  were  lovely  and  pleasant  in  their  lives,  and  in  their 
death  they  are  not  divided." 

CHILDREN   AND   DESCENDANTS    OF    DANIEL    HUBBARD 
OF  PITTSFIELD,  MASS. 

Daniel  (called  deacon  and  captain;  b  1737,  d  1798,  m  1759  Rachel 
Fally;  had  five  children),  Elizabeth  (b  1739,  d  before  1784,  m  Joshua 
Robbins;  had  eleven  children),  Azubah  (b  1741,  d  1742),  Zadoc  (b  1742, 
d  1747),  James  (called  deacon  and  lieut,  b  i744,d  i8i3,m  1766  Martha  Liv- 
ermore;  had  five  children),  Azubah  (b  1745,  d  1787,  m  1764  Amos  Root; 
had  fourteen  children),  Naomi  (b  1747,  d  1775,  m  1768  Joseph  Clark;  had 
three  children),  Zadoc  (see  following),  Lvdia  (b  1750,  m  1772  Amos 
Delano;  had  twelve  children),  Ruth  b  1752,  m  1789  William  Ashley,  of 
Westfield;  had  nine  children),  Dorothy  (b  1754,  d  181 3,  m  Caleb  Wad- 
hams;  had  eight  children),  Paul  (b  1756,  d  1758),  Paul  (b  1758,  d  1784,111 
Esther ;  had  one  child),  and  Sarah  (b  1760,  d  1847,  m  Capt  Rob- 
ert Francis;  had  twelve  children). 

ZADOC— b  in  Westfield,  Mass,  in  1749,  d  in  Aurora,  N.  Y.,  in  181 4,  m 
Lois  (Pomeroy?);  he  lived  in  Pittsfield,  Lanesboro,  and  Lenox,  Mass, 
and  Lisle,  N.  Y.  Children — Zadoc  (b  1773,  d  1827,  m  in  1795  Polly  Blos- 
som), Nathan  (see  following),  Lois  (b  in  Lanesboro,  Mass,  in  1776,  d 
Mch  24,  1 861,  in  Cameron,  N.  Y.,  m  Jan  4,  1801,  Stephen  Wells).  ZADOC 
then  m  Widow  Sally  (Lobdell)  Sprague.  Children — Daniel  (b  1780,  d 
in  Cameron  Mills,  N.  Y.,  in  1864,  m  Fanny  Stearns  and  had  Lucy,  Zadoc, 
Frances,  Daniel  A.,  Sara//,  Alphonso,  Melissa,  Zadock  S.,  Chaunccy,  Alma 
D.,  Lois,  and  Antoinette)  and  Sally  (b  1782,  d  1816,  m  David  Seymour). 

NATHAN— b  in  Lanesboro,  Mass,  Feb,  1775,  d  in  Middlebury,  Vt,  in 
1813,  m  Jan  4,  1801,  in  Lenox,  Mass,  Alma  Belding;  a  surveyor,  mer- 
chant and  lumberman.  Children — Franklin  Beldino  (b  Oct  21,  1801, 
d  Mch  1,  1865,  m  1828,  Maria  E.  Seymour;  lived  in  New  Orleans,  La, 
Cameron,  N.  Y.,  and  Mercer,  Pa,  where  he  died,  leaving  Mary  Amelia, 
Charles  T.,  Nathan  D.,  Frances  Maria,  Pomeroy,  Franklin,  Margaret  S., 
Charles  T.,  Albert  B., and  Charles  S.),  Ch auncey  Pomeroy  (see  following), 


THE  HULBARD  HUBBARDS.  73 

Fanny  Belding  (b  Dec,  1805,  d  May  28,  1857,111  Batavia,  N.  Y.,  m  Ezra 
Gleason),  and  Nathan  P.  (b  Mch,  1813,  d  in  Battle  Creek,  Mich,  unm, 
May  9,  18S2). 

CHAUNCEY  POMEROY— b  In  Pittsfield,  Mass,  Nov  17,  1803,111 
Aug  3,  1831,  his  cousin,  Mary  Wells  (b  Jan  25,  1807,  in  Lenox,  Mass), 
daughter  of  Stephen  a:  d  Lois  (Hubbard)  Wells.  They  have  resided  in 
Woodhull  and  Cameron,  N.  Y.,  and  now  live  in  Fredonia,  N.  Y.  Both 
are  members  of  the  Presbyterian  Church.  Children — Emily  (b  June  3, 
1832,  m  1881  Daniel  Stearns  Hubbard;  no  children),  Ann  Maria  (b  Apl 
27,  1834,  m  July,  1873,  Amasa  Cooke  and  had  Chauncey  Ernest  and 
Theodore  Frederick),  Adelaide  (b  Feb  19,  1837),  Mary  Adelia  (b  Jan 
20,  1839,  d  1841),  Albert  Wells,  Theodore  Sedgwick,  and  Chauncey 
George  (see  following),  Alma  Rose  (b  Feb  22,  1850),  and  Mary  An- 
nette (b  Nov  9,  1 85 1,  d  1852). 

ALBERT  WELLS— b  in  Cameron,  N.  Y.,  Oct  18,  1841,  gr.  Amherst 
College  1867,  and  Princeton  Theol.  Sem.  later;  pastor  at  Canaan,  N.  H., 
and  Dillsburgh,  Pa.,  until  1873;  missionary  at  Sivas,  West  Turkey; 
m  Aug  25,  1S73,  Emma  Roxanna  Spencer  of  Corning,  N.  Y.  Children — 
Ray  Spencer  (b  Dec  3,  1875),  Luke  Cressie  (b  Sep  29,  1877),  Faith  (b 
Apl  14,  1880),  Loyal  George  and  Royal  Chauncey,  twins  (b  Feb  26, 
1882),  Hugh  Wells  (bMch  19,  1887),  Mary  (b  May  22,  1890),  and  Theo- 
dore Horace  (b  June  5,  1892). 

THEODORE  SEDGWICK— b  in  Cameron,  N.  Y.,  July  6,'  1843; 
attended  common  schools  and  Alfred  Academy,  N.  Y.,  and  taught 
school  winters;  he  also  attended  Eastman's  Commercial  College  at 
Poughkeepsie,  N.  Y.  In  1866,  with  others,  he  formed  the  firm  of  T.  S. 
HUBBARD  &  CO.,  to  carry  on  the  grape  business  at  Fredonia,  and 
later  on  devoted  himself  exclusively  to  grape  vine  propagation.  He  mar- 
ried in  July,  1873,  Caroline  Mills  Gilbert,  daughter  of  Dr.  John  Gilbert, 
of  Fredonia.  Children — Florence  Mildred  (b  Jan  5,  1875,  class  1898 
Wellesley  College),  Theodore  Gilbert,  (b  Mch  25,  1876,  class  1897  Cor- 
nell Univ),  and  Pomeroy  Benton  (b  Sep  29,  1877). 

CHAUNCEY  GEORGE— b  in  Cameron  Oct  16,  1845,  studied  medi- 
cine and  graduated  in  1871  from  N.  Y.  Univ.  Med.  Coll.  In  1872  he 
settled  and  began  to  practice  in  Hornellsville,  Steuben  Co.,  N.  Y.,  where 
he  has  been  for  several  years  county  coroner  and  a  member  of  the  City 
Board  of  Health.  He  is  an  elder  in  the  Presbyterian  Church,  and  mar- 
ried in  1880  Florence  Nightingale  Prentiss,  of  Jasper,  N.  Y.  Children— 
Mary  (b  and  d  in  1882),  Chauncey  Pomeroy  (bin  1883),  and  Harold  C. 
(b  in  1S89). 


8Lx 


P©«1P,K1T,  <&onn. 


Happy  and  innocent  were  the  ages  of  our  forefathers,  who  ate  herbs  and  parched  corn,  drank  the 
pure  stream,  and  broke  their  fast  with  nuts  and  roots  -Jeremy  Taylor,  D.  D. 


JOHN  HUBBARD*  first  appears  as  an  inhabitant  of  Boston,  Mass. 
about  1670.  The  records  read:  "John  Hubert  of  Boston  removed 
to  Roxbury."  Military  records  show  that  a  "  John  Hubbard  of  Roxbury 
was  in  Capt.  Isaac  Johnson's  Company  in  the  King  Philip  Indian  War," 
period  of  1675-76.  He  had  a  wife  Rebecca  (Wells?)  who,  Feb  17,  1683, 
"  confessed  her  sin  and  repentance  and  faith  in  Christ:  was  reed  to  full 
comunion  and  baptized."  They  were  both  members  of  Rev.  John 
Eliot's  (the  Indian  apostle's)  church  of  Roxbury,  Mass.  April  13,  1684 
(after  their  removal  to  Roxbury),  their  daughters  Rebecca  and  Rachel 
were  baptized.  They  were  then,  probably,  good-sized  children.  Sep- 
tember 21,  1684,  a  daughter,  Sarah,  was  baptized.  April  11,  1686,  Mary 
and  five  children  of  other  families  were  baptized.  July  21,  1686,  about 
forty  of  Roxbury's  citizens  left  that  place  and  founded  New  Roxbury, 
afterward  called  Pomfret,  then  Woodstock,  or  "  Mashamequet."  This 
town  remained  under  Massachusetts  jurisdiction  ttntil  1794.  Here,  May 
3,  1689,  a  son,  John  Hubbard,  Jr,  was  born.  In  1707  JOHN  HUB- 
BARD, Sr,  and  family  removed  to  the  northern  half  of  Woodstock,  and 
further  traces  of  him  and  his  wife  Rebecca  are  lost.  He  was  one  of  the 
original  proprietors  of  Pomfret— none  of  whom  could  be  under  1 9  years 
of  age  by  covenant  entered  into — and  was  assigned  "  lot  21."  Children — 
Rachel  (bap  Apl  13,  1684,  m  Apl  9,  1690,  John  Holmes  of  Woodstock, 
this  being  the  first  marriage  in  the  town),  Rebecca  (bap  Apl  13,  1684,  m 
Feb  4,  1701-2,  David  Bishop  of  Woodstock),  Sarah  (bap  Sep  21,  1684, 
"of  Mashamequet,"  m  Dec  26,  1707,  Josiah  Bugbee  of  Woodstock), 
Mary    (bap   Apl    11,    1686,  "  of  Mashamequet,"  d  in   Pomfret  May  14, 

*  The  compiler  so  far  has  been  unable  to  discover  who  were  the  parents  of  this  "  John  of  Pomfret." 
74 


JOHN  HUBBARD,    OF  POMFRET,    CONN. 


/D 


1724,  m  Jan  16,  1711,  (Capt)  Leicester  Grosvenor  of  same  place,  b  in 
Roxbury,  Mass,  1676,  son  of  John  and  Esther  (Clarke)  Grosvenor,  and 
had  Jcrusha  B.,  Mary  B.,  Anna  B.,  Zeruiah  and  Sarah.  Leicester 
Grosvenor  afterward  married  Mrs.  Rebecca  Waldo  and  had  Leicester, 
Jr,  and  Rebecca,  and  died  in  Pomfret  Sep  8,  1759),  and  John  (see  fol- 
lowing). 

JOHN — b  in  Woodstock  May  3,  1689,  d  after  1731,  m  Elizabeth . 

In  1 7 13  he  was  one  of  the  petitioners  for  the  charter  of  Pomfret  in  the 
"  Mashamequet  purchase."  In  17 18 ''he  purchased  the  homestead  of 
John  Adams,  descendant  of  Richard  Adams."  This  homestead  tract  lay 
between  Canterbury  and  Mortlake,  and  subsequently  became  Brooklyn, 
Ct.  He  was  a  member  of  the  Second  Church  in  1731.  Children — Ben- 
jamin (see  following),  Joseph  (b  in  Pomfret,  and  about  1781  rem  to 
Salisbury  and  located  on  Tory  Hill.  He  was  a  Tory — see  Some  Hub- 
bard Royalists — and  a  member  of  the  Episcopal  Church  in  1770  in  the 

Mortlake    District,  now   Brooklyn;   he   m   in  Pomfret  and  had 

Luther,  Jessee,  Olive  who  m  Ethel  Reed,  Sybil  who  m  Joseph  Whitney, 
and  Parhy  who  m  Anna  Catlin,  dau  John  and  Sarah  (Landon)  Catlin  of 
Salisbury,  Ct.,  and  had  Joseph  Augustus,  Hiram  Bosworth,  Alexander 
and  John  Henry  (see  Prominent  American  Hubbards)  (?),  Jonas  (tradi- 
tion says  that  he  lived  and  died  in  Canterbury,  Brooklyn,  Ct),  Elizabeth 
(d  Sep  25,  1754),  and  Timothy  (d  Mch  9,  1758). 

BENJAMIN,  son  of  John  and  Elizabeth  Hubbard,  was  born  Mch  27, 
1 714,  and  in  1730  went  to  Newport,  R.  I.,  but  returned  to  Connecticut 
and  married  in  1737  Susannah  Cady  (d  Dec  8,  1793)  of  Brooklyn,  Ct. 
Children — Willard  (see  following),  Benjamin  (b  June  27,  1741,  lived  in 
Smithfield,  R.  I.,  near  Providence,  and  removed  to  Pomfret,  Ct,  with  his 
wife  and  young  children,  and  died  there  Sep  10,  1790,  leaving  Thomas 
(see  Prominent  American  Hubbards),  Benjamin,  M.  D.,  John,  and 
Stephen  (see  Descendants  Stephen  Hubbard),  Susannah  (b  1743,  d  Apl 
9,  1799,  m  Ephraim  Warren  and  had  Isaac,  John,  William,  Betsey, 
Delight,  Thankful,  and  Wealthy),  Mary  (b  Mch  1,  1745,  d  May  11,  1762), 
John  (b  Jan  30,  1748,  d  Oct  22,  1755),  Thankful  (b  1750,  d  Jan  30,  1808), 
Lucy  (b  Nov  21,  1751,  d  Oct  12,  1754),  Moses  (b  July  14,  1753,  d  Oct  14, 
1754),  Lucy  (b  Feb  4,  1756,  d  Jan  8,  1790),  Prudence  (b  Mch  16,  1760,  d 
Jul}-  16,  1786),  John  (b  abt  1761,  d  in  Laurens,  Otsego  Co,  N.  Y.,  abt 

1851,  m  Martha ,  and  \iSL&Anue  who  d  in  Canterbury  Dec  29, 

1859),  and  Hannah  (youngest,  m  a  Mr.  Perry). 

WILLARD,  eldest  son  of  Benjamin  and  Susannah  (Cady)  Hubbard, 
was  born  in  Brooklyn,  Ct,  Nov  10,  1737,  and  died  in  1813  of  pneumonia. 
He  married  July  20,  1767,  Lucy  Starr  (b  1727,  d  1815),  youngest  daugh- 
ter of  Samuel  Starr  of  Norwich,  Ct,  and  Annie  (Bushnell)  Starr.     Phil- 


76  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

anthropic  people  in  England  became  interested  in  and  attempted  the 
evangelization  of  the  Mohican  Indians,  and  WILLARD  HUBBARD 
was  chosen  their  missionary  and  teacher,  with  headquarters  at  Mont- 
ville,  Ct,  where,  about  1667,  a  church  and  school-house  were  erected. 
Sampson  Occum,  a  Mohican,  was  educated  and  ordained  in  England  and 
preached  a  sermon  before  the  Queen  of  George  III.  He  then  returned 
to  America  and  assisted  Mr.  HUBBARD  in  his  labors.  Good  results 
were  becoming  visible  when  the  Revolutionary  War  interrupted  and 
ended  their  efforts,  and  Mr.  HUBBARD  and  his  accomplished  wife 
returned  to  Brooklyn  and  re-commenced  teaching  school,  which  he  con- 
tinued until  1798.  He  and  his  wife  were  well  endowed  with  intellectual 
gifts,  of  spiritual  temperaments,  quite  orthodox,  and  well  fitted  for  their 
vocation.  Children — Simeon  (b  Sep  10,  1769,  d  Mch  6,  1771),  Simeon 
Carew  (b  Jan  30,  1771,  was  the  adopted  son  and  heir  of  Capt.  Carew  of 
Norwich  and  died  there  May  19,  1850),  Caroline  (b  Dec  16,  1772,  d  Apl 
17,  1790),  Samuel  Starr  (b  Aug  4,  1777,  d  Aug  3,  1815,  leaving  son 
Albert  (Dr.)  of  Scituate  and  Providence,  R.  I.,  who  had  son  Samuel), 
and  Willard  (see  following). 

WILLARD,  son  of  Willard  and  Lucy  (Starr)  Hubbard,  was  born  Apl 
6,  1775,  in  Montville,  New  London  County,  Ct,  and  died  in  Pomfret  Sep 

29,  1866.  He  married  Apl  19,  i8or,  Lois  Williams  (d  Aug  11,  1833), 
daughter  of  Seth  and  Mary  (Snow)  Williams  of  Raynham,  Mass,  who 
had  eleven  children.  He  was  greatly  esteemed  and  a  very  charitable 
gentleman.  Children — Lucy  Starr  (b  July  21,  1802,  d  1887,  m  Nov  28, 
1 83 1,  Carr  Lawton  of  Pomfret,  and  had  Charles  (d  at  24)  and  Lewis  C. 
She  and  her  husband  removed  to  Providence  and  taught  there  a  private 
school),  Henry  (b  Sep  12,  1804,  d  Sep  14,  1804),  Charles  Williams  (b 
June  7,  1806,  d  Dec,  1878,  m  Lucy  Spaulding,  lived  in  Pomfret,  and  had 
Joseph,  Fanny,  d  y,  and  Lucy  who  m  Henry  H.  French  of  Stockbridge, 
Mass),  Mary  Snow  (b  Aug  31,  1808),  Catharine  (b  Nov  2,  1810,  d  in 
Pomfret  June  13,  1872),  William  (b  Mch  14,  1813,  d  Apl  1,  1817),  Eliza 
Ann  (b  Feb  7,  1815,  d  Aug  8,  1884,  m  Appleton  Park  of  Pawtucket,  R. 
I.,  June  6,  1854,  and  had  Susan  Maria  Park,  b  Oct  19,  1855,  m  her  cousin 
Henry  Seward  Hubbard  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line),  Charlotte  (b 
Dec  11,  1816,  d  Sep  13,  1817),  Charlotte  (b  Nov  11,  1818,  d  in  Pomfret 
Oct  20,  1886),  and  Samuel  William  (see  following). 

SAMUEL  WILLIAM,  youngest  child  of  Willard  and  Lois  (Williams) 
Hubbard,  was  born  Dec  29,  1821,  and  married  Mary  Hurst  Gladding  in 
Providence,  R.  I.,  May  19,  1850.     Children — Willard  Gladding  (b  Apl 

30,  1853,  m  1882  Emma  Gould  of  Providence  and  had  Ernest,  b  Apl  5, 
1883,  and  Frank,  b  1885),  Henry  Seward  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line), 
Albert  Charles  (b  Sep  26,  1856),  and  Ellen  Rebecca  (b  June  14,  1858). 


JOHN  HUBBARD,    OF  POM  FRET,    CO. WW  77 

DESCENDANTS    OF    STEPHEN    HUBBARD    OF 
SMITHFIELD,    R.    I. 

STEPHEN  HUBBARD,  son  of  (Major)  Benjamin  and  Mrs.  Chloe 
(Eldridge)  Hubbard  (widow  of  James  Eldridge,  with  several  children), 
was  born  Dec  29,  1776,  in  Smithfield,  R.  I.,  and  died  June  20,  1853.  He 
married  Sep  19,  1S03,  Zeruiah  Grosvenor  (b  in  Brookfield,  Mass,  June 
16,  1779,  d  Apl  7,  1S42),  dau  Oliver  and  Zeruiah  (Payson)  Grosvenor. 
Children — William  Grosvenor  (see  following"),  Julia  Maria  (b  in 
Pomfret  Apl  14,  1807,  d  in  New  York  City  Apl  20,  1872,  m  Sep  10,  1835, 
Canfield  Jenkins — b  in  Rhinebeck,  N.  Y.,  Mch  22,  1805,  d  in  New  York 
Citv  May  29,  187 1 — and  had  Mary  Hubbard  Jenkins  and  Edward  Can- 
field  Jenkins),  Oliver  Payson  (b  in  Pomfret,  Mch  31,  1809,  Yale  1828, 
Prof  at  Dartmouth,  N.  H.,  1836;  Legislature  1833-34,  S.  C.  Med  Coll 
1837,  LL.D  Hamilton  Coll,  N.  Y.,  1861,  scientist;  m  May  17,  1837,  Faith 
Wadsworth  Silliman,  b  New  Haven  Dec  18,  181 2,  d  N.  Y.  City  Feb  26, 
1887,  dau  Prof  Benjamin  and  Harriet  (Trumbull)  Silliman,  and  had 
Harriet  Trumbull 'b  in  Hanover,  N.  H.,  May  25,  1838,  d  N.  Y.  City  Oct 
25,  1891;  Henrietta  Whitney  b  in  Hanover,  Feb  28,  1840,  unm;  and 
Grosvenor  Silliman,  b  in  New  Haven  Oct  10,  1842,  unm),  Benjamin 
Payson  (b  in  Rome,  N.  Y.,  181 5,  m  at  Ottawa,  111,  Aug  21,  1838,  Saunna 
Clark  and  had  Annie  Hampton,  d  1S47  or  1848;  Julia  A.,  bOct  7,  1S39, 
unm;  Mary  Touise,  b  Oct  21,  1842,  m  in  Rochester  Sep  5,  1867,  Benton 
Merritt  Haigar — b  Apl  12,  1839 — no  children;  Henriette  Chauncey,  b  in 
Athens,  O,  Jan  20,  1847,  m  in  Rochester  Aug  5,  1868,  J.  Otis  Smith,  no 
children  but  adopted  dau  Ruth),  and  Stkphkx  Grosvenor  (b  in  Rome, 
N.  Y.,  Oct  16,  1 81 6,  married  Mrs.  Aurelia  Robinson — b  in  Middletown, 
Ct,  Jan  5,  182 1,  d  in  New  Haven,  Ct,  May  16,  1S91 — dau  William  and 
Aurelia  (Bowers)  Plumb;  no  children;  Dean  Med.  wSchool,  Yale  Coll.) 

WILLIAM  GROSYENOR— born  in  Providence,  R.  I.,  Dec.  1,  1S04, 
died  in  Elgin,  111,  Dec  15,  1883,  m  (1)  Mary  Catharine  Schuyler  (d  Oct 
14,  1829)  of  Booneville,  N.  Y.  Children — Mary  Schuvler  (b  in  Boone- 
ville  Aug  9, 1829,  d  in  Lynn,  Mass,  Oct  23,  1865,  m  William  Allen  Chase — 
b  in  Lynn,  Mass,  July  15,  1829,  d  Jan  19,  1863),  son  William  and  Salina 
E.  (Washburn)  Chase — and  had  Louisa  Schuyler  Chase).  WILLIAM 
GROSVENOR  HUBBARD  then  married  Sep  19,  1839,  at  Lisbon,  111, 
(2)  Charlotte  Wright  (b  in  Rome,  N.  Y.,  Feb  28,  181 7,  d  in  Elgin.  Ill, 
Mch  10,  1885).  Children — Harriet  Grosvenor  (b  in  Lisbon,  111,  Sep 
16,  1840,  d  in  Elgin,  111,  Nov  24,  1843),  William  Wright  (b  in  Chicago 
May  11,  1S42,  d  in  Elgin  Sep  22,  1843),  Charlotte  Julia  (b  in  Elgin 
Feb  11,  1846,  d  there  Nov  17,  1850),  Henry  Wright  (b  in  Elgin  May  17, 
1844,  unm),  and  William  (b  in  Elgin  June  27,  1849,  m  July  10,  1872,  at 


7^ 


// 1  HI  I.  I RD   HIS  TOR  Y  A  ND   GENE  A  LOGY. 


Champaign,  111,  Callie  Edwards,  b  in  Felicity,  Ohio,  Nov  14,  1852,  and  had 
Winifred,  b  in  Chicago  Dec  9,  1875,  d  Sep  10,  1876;  William  Edwards,  b 
Mch  16,  1877,  at  Rutland,  111,  d  Mch  19,  1877;  Charlotte  Eunice,  bin  Elgin 
Sep  29,  1879,  d  Feb  14,  1882;  Ethel  May,  b  in  Elgin  Aug  19,  1886;  and 
Marguerite,  b  Nov  30,  1891). 

MISCELLANEOUS. 

The  subjoined  ilata.  taken  from  the  town  records  of  Brooklyn,  Ct— Brooklyn  was  set  off  from 
Pomfret  and  Canterbury— cannot  be  connectedly  attached  to  this  line  of  Hubbards  by  the  compiler  at 
tin  place  where  it  belongs,  but  is  considered  worth  printing,  nevertheless:  "  Calvin  Hubbard  married 
Sarah  Derby  November  10. 1778  [d  ?  1781].  Children— Filena,*  born  January  6, 1780:  Calvin,*  born  De- 
cember24,  1781.  Children  of  Ebenezer  and  Molly  Hubbard— Kel-ben,  born  Dec  10,  1781;  Ltdia,  born 
.June  26,  1786,  Ebenezer,  born  July  5,  1789;  William,  born  June  4,  1791;  Polly,  b  >rn  Aug  30,  1793." 

The  following  data  lias  been  copied  from  a  "  tree  "  prepared  by  Douglas  Hubbard.  The  compiler 
cannot  determine  where  it  should  be  attached  to  this  line,  if  of  this  line:  "Children  of  John  and 
Sarah  (Barker)  Hubbard  of  Newport,  R.  I.—  Henry  (b  1768.  m  Mary  Tanner,  Kingstown,  H.  I.),  John 
Ob  1773.  m  Virtue  dark,  Newport,  and  had  Sarah,  b  1803,  m  Nathan  Gladden;  John,  b  1810,  m  Carman 
de  la  Milla  of  California:  Tirtut .  b  1812,  m  Charles  Crosby;  Benjamin,  b  1614;  Amelia,  b  1816,  m  Stephen 
Sherman:  William,  b  1818,  m  Eliza  Swann  of  Providence),  William  (b  177H,  m  Hannah  Brayton.  War 
ren.  R.  I.,  and  had  Eunice,  b  1813,  m  Alfred  Seymour:  William,  b  1815.  ra  Maria  Rice:  Hartit  t,  b  1817.  m 
Hale  Bowen:  Benjamin,  b  1819;  Sarah,  b  1821.  m  George  Martin;  John,  b  1823,  m  Mary  Peck).  Amelia 
<b  1782,  m  Samuel  Townsend),  and  Sarah  (b  1789,  m  David  Grant)." 

*  Philena  married  Ebenezer  Day  and  had  Hubbard  Day  and  Henry  Day  of  Providence  and  Mary 
Day  of  Fall  Kiver,  who  married  1 1)  Mr.  Gladdin,  (2)  Dr.  Durfee,  Calvin  was  a  captain  in  the2lst  Con- 
necticut Militia,  War  1812,  and  married  Olive  Hill  ami  had  nine  children— Jeremiah  (m  Abbie  Young, 
lived  in  Killingly,  Ct.,  and  had  Abble,  Rhuhamah,  and  Alvln),  William  Augustus  (m  Ann  Eliza 
\V 1.  lived  in  Centreville.  R.  I.,  and  had  Carrie  Maria  who  in  Whipple  Andrews  and  settled  in  Min- 
neapolis., Minn:  Hope  Ann  Eliza  who  m  Edward  11.  Steele  and  settled  in  Minneapolis;  and  William 
Harrison  who  settled  in  Minneapolis,  m  Marietta  Arnold,  and  had  Grace  Lillian  who  m  E.  Kir'.y 
Millspaugh  of  Minneapolis),  Mabia  olive  (m  Schuyler  Young,  lived  in  Killingly,  and  had  William), 
GEOBOE  (m  Mary  Young,  lived  in  Killingly,  and  had  Hester  who  m  Leonard  Kiet  of  Killingly;  and 
Ma,,,t  who  m  William  llis.-ock  of  Killingly  and  had  William,  George,  Emma,  Eugene  and  Mary  . 
Edwabd  IIii.i.  uii  Mary  Browne  of  Danielsonville,  Ct),  Daniel  SPRAGUE  (m  I.ydia  Ann  Hale  of  Kil- 
lingly, and  had  Henry  Calvin  and  Ida  Olive),  Henry  (m  Anna  Rosseau,  rem  to  Auburn,  Cal.,  and  had 
Henry  Calvin  who  m  Mary  Noble  of  San  Francisco  and  had  Henry  Noble  and  another  child,  name 
unknown),  and  Philena  Louisa  (m  Theodore  Hammett  of  Danielsonville,  Ct.,  and  had  Katit  Hi  lev, 
Prt  cilia,  A./;.  Lawton,  Theodore  Eraslus,  Carrie,  Abbit  '/<  lisea,  Maria  Emetine  who  m  (  harles 
I)  Jenner,  and  Edward  Hubbard  who  m  Ida  May  Wood).  The  compiler  is  of  ..pinion  that  these 
descendants  are  of  another  Hubbard  line  than  that  of  "  John  Hubbard's  of  Pomfret,  ct.,"  but  cannot 
prove  it. 


■  —  ■  ■  t _:■- — — :--     __*,•  ->■*._; — -^- — ■~^cS^JT 

- 


Breathes  there  a  man  with  soul  so  dead. 
Wh<  i  never  to  himself  hath  said— 
This  is  my  own,  my  native  land  ! 

:thin  him  burned, 
As  home  his  footsteps  he  hath  turned. 
From  wandering  on  a  foreign  strand— Sir  Walter  Scott. 


There  is  but  little  that  can  be  given  of  this  Hubbard  Branch  that  is  of  a  satisfactory  nature.    The 
comDiler  upon  visiting:  Virginia  found  genealogical  records  illy  kept.    None  i  if  the  descendants  pos- 
any  preserved  lines  of  their  own  descent,  and  knowledge  of  their  forefathers  was  hazy 
indeed.    But  few  church  parishes  ever  pretended  to  keen  records  of  births,  deaths,  or  marriages  :  and 
town  records,  which  possibly  might  have  shed  genealogical  light  the  compiler  found  had  been  carried 
lyed  by  the  ravages  of  war. 
?re-ent  generation  of  Hubbards  in  Virginia  use  but  one  "b  "  in  their  name,  some  pronounc- 
ing it  Hu-bard  and  others  Hub-ard.    An  inspection  of  the  early  land  grants  discli  ised  several  forms  •  if 
spelling.    James  Hub-ard.  i  if  Nels  >n  County,  had  a  book-plate  copy  of  a  coat  of  arms  with  the  wife's 
shield  impaled  with  the  husbands  upon  the  wrong  (dexter)  side  of  the  escutcheon,  which  bore  the 
motto,  -    -  Fidelis.'"  and  which  was  surmounted  with  the  crest  Sagittarius.    This  was  not  duly 

authenticated,  though  showing  some  points  of  similarity  to  the  "Hobart  "  Coat  of  Buckinghamshire 
Eng.,  notably  in  its  shield  {sable)  and  charge   "estoik  Savoring 

t  spuriousni  -  .sequently.  not  illustrated  in  this  volume  with  the  i  itinera  tats.    Receiv- 

ing no  substantial  encouragement  in  his  work,  the  compUer  felt  unwilling  to  engage  in  a  laborious 
research  attended  with  vexations  difficulties  and  a  considerable  expenditure  i  if  time  and  money.  He 
unearthed  in  Richmond,  however,  in  the  land  office,  the  following  information  regarding  some  early 
land  grants,  which  is  herewith  given  to  enable  any  future  Hubbard  students  in  genealogy  to  start  off 
with  acuiate  clues.    The  spelling  of  the  names  is  given  as  found  in  the  records 

JUNE  6.  1654,  Robert  Hubert  was  granted  300  acres  on  North  side  of 
York  River  in  "  Gloster  "  Co.  June  10,  1654,  Robert  Hubbard  (also 
Hubard  and  Huberd  in  same  paper)  was  granted  500  acres  in  one  tract 
and  500  acres  in  another  in  "Westmoreland  Co.  Dec  12,  1654,  Robert 
Hubard  was  granted  1,600  acres  in  Westmoreland  Co.  Men  17,  1655, 
Henry  Hubbard  (also  Huberd)  was  granted  250  acres  in  Gloucester 
August  iS,  1655,  Matthew  Hubbard  (also  Huberd)  was  granted  590 
acres  in  York  Co.     Aug  21,  1655.  Henry  Huberd  was  acres  in 

"Gloster"  Co.     Feb  6,  1656,  Robert  Hubbard  and  W.  Lewis  were  or. 
jointly  2,000  acres  in  Westmoreland  Co.     Apl  21,  1657,  Clement  Herbut 
79 


So  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

was  gr.  300  acres  in  Rappahannock  Co.,  on  North  side  of  Rappahannock 
River;  also  Apl   25,  1657,  150  acres  more;  also,   same  date,    150  acres 

more  to  him  and Gillet,  "  against  land  of  John  ";  also  Oct  8,  1657, 

500  acres  in  Rappahannock  Co.  Mch  27,  1658,  Rich'd  Herbord  was  gr. 
250  acres  in  Westmoreland  Co.  Oct  4,  1658,  Wm.  and  John  Hubord 
were  gr.  300  acres  in  Westmoreland.  Oct.  6,  1658,  Mathew  Hubbard 
(also  Huberd)  was  gr.  590  acres  in  York.  Nov  20,  1661,  Henry  Huberd 
was  gr.  250  acres  in  Gloucester.  Mch  18,  1662,  Wm.  and  John  Herberd 
were  gr.  350  acres  in  Westmoreland.  Feb  21,  1663,  Ro.  Hubbard  and 
Robt  Wolf  were  gr.  533  acres  in  Warwick  Co.;  also  Robert  Hubert  gr. 
168  acres.  Oct  26,  1666,  Rich'd  Herbeord  was  gr.  1,500  acres  in  West- 
moreland. Mch  23,  1664,  Rich'd  Huberd,  Col.  Gerard,  and Fow- 
ler were  gr.  80  acres  in  Stafford  Co.  July  20,  1669,  John  Herbut  was  gr. 
122  acres  in  Lower  Norfolk  Co.  Oct  25,  1669,  John  and  Wm.  Herberd 
were  gr.  530  acres  in  Stafford  Co.  Oct  29,  1669,  Rich'd  Herbeord  was 
gr.  135  acres  in  Stafford  Co.  Apl  28,  1691,  Mathew  Huberd  was  gr.  1,500 
acres  in  James  City  Co.  April  27,  1702,  Mary  Herbut,  orphan  of  Thos. 
Herbut,  died  in  Pawmunkey  Neck,  was  gr.  200  acres  in  King  and  Cmeen 
Co.  Apl  1,  1 7 17,  Wm.  Herberd,  of  Overwhater  (?)  Parish,  Stafford  Co., 
was  gr.  365  acres  in  Essex  Co.  Jan  22,  17 18,  Ro.  Hubbard  was  gr.  37 
acres  in  James  City  Co.  Feb  20,  17 19,  John  Hubbard,  Jr.,  was  gr.  250 
acres  in  King  William  Co.,  on  the  south  side  'of  the  Mattapony  River. 
Aug  17,  1720,  John  Hubbard,  Jr.,  was  gr.  100  acres  "of  and  in 
Nansemond  Co.,"  also  185  acres.  Aug.  17,  1725,  John  Hubbard  wasgr. 
21  acres  on  the  south  side  of  Queen's  Creek,  adjoining  his  plantation  in 
York  Co.  Oct  31,  1726,  John  Hubbard  was  gr.  234  acres  in  St.  Marga- 
ret's Parish,  King  William  Co.,  on  the  southwest  side  of  White's  Swamp. 
Aug  1,  1734,  Benj.  Hubbard  was  gr.  400  acres  in  Prince  George  Co. 
Oct  30,  1736,  Edwd  Hubbard  was  gr.  400  acres  in  Amelia  Co.  Oct  30, 
1736,  Benj.  Hubbard  was  gr.  890  acres  in  Amelia  Co.  Mch  17,  1736, 
Rich'd  Hubbard  was  gr.  400  acres  in  Goochland  Co.  Nov  3,  1750,  Benj. 
Hubbard  was  gr.  800  acres  in  Lunenburg  Co.,  on  North  side  of  Blackis- 
ton  (?)  River.  July  20,  1753,  Benj.  Hubbard  was  gr.  196  acres  in 
Spotsylvania  Co.  July  15,  1760,*  Edwd  Hubbard  was  gr.  290  acres  in 
Halifax  Co. 

Many  of  these  Virginia  Hubbards  migrated  into  the  adjacent  Southern 
.States;  a  number  settled  in  Alabama,  a  few  of  whom  eventually  reached 

*  This  date  (1760)  ends  the  land  grants  made  to  Hubbards.  It  will  be  noticed  that  the  later  gran- 
tees'names  were  spelled  "Hubbard,"  though  the  former  ones  were  distorted  into  almost  unrecog- 
nizable forms.  Still  there  is  no  question  that  in  all  cases  "  Hubbards  "  were  meant.  It  is  barely  pos- 
sible that  owing  to  the  close  connection  the  following  name  had  with  "  Hubbard  "  records,  this  per- 
son may  have  been  also  a  "Hubbard."  "April  25,  1703,  Edwd  Hobday  was  gr.  263  acres  in  King  and 
Queen  Co."  There  were  various  other  names  mentioned  in  many  of  these  grants  which  were  not 
copied. 


} 'I  KG  IX I  A    Hi 'BEARDS.  81 

Mississippi;  many  more  located  in  the  region  of  Stokes  and  Gilmore 
counties,  N.  C,  a  few  being  Quakers  and  intermarrying  freely  with  this 
sturdy  sect.  Many  of  them  were  opposed  to  slavery  and  even  suffered 
persecution  in  preaching  its  unholiness. 


There  is  a  record  or  tradition  of  a  JOSEPH  HUBBARD,  Quaker, 
who  came  to  America  with  William  Penn  and  settled  with  him  at  Phila- 
delphia in  1681,  but  afterward  removed  into  Virginia  and  North  Carolina. 
Among  other  children,  he  had  a  son  Jeremiah,  who  preached  the  Quaker 
or  doctrine  of  the  "  Friends  "  to  the  inhabitants  of  North  Carolina.  The 
data  of  the  descent  from  JOSEPH  and  Jeremiah  of  families  now  living 
bearing  the  Hubbard  name  is  quite  imperfect  and  can  not  here  be  given 
with  regard  for  accuracy.  It  is  quite  possible  the  following  genealogical 
scraps  spring  from  these  ancestors:  Rev.  Jeremiah  Hubbard,  descended 
from  this  Joseph  Hubbard;  and  a  missionary  among  the  Indians  at 
Afton,  Indian  Territory,  and  publisher  of  The  Indian  Moccasin,  writes 
that  JOSEPH  HUBBARD  married  Ann  Crews,  a  half-breed  Cherokee, 
and  by  her  had  Hardy,  Jeremiah,  Jacob,  Woodson,  Joseph,  Rhoda, 
Susannah  and  Anna.     Hardy  had  Joseph  and  Caleb. 


Another  account  relates  that  about  the  middle  of  the  eighteenth  cen- 
tury there  existed  one  GEORGE  HUBBARD,  who  lived  at  White  Oak 
Swamp  Monthly  Meeting,  Va.,  and  who  died  after  1789.  He  had  a  wife, 
Judith,  who  died  before  this  date.  They  had  a  son  John  (b  July  30, 
1752,  d  Mch  27,  1834,  in  Deep  River,  N.  C),  who  removed  to  Deep 
River,  N.  C,  in  1789.  About  1778  he  married  Martha  Sanders  (sup- 
posed), daughter  of  Hezekiah  Sanders,  of  Stokes  Co.,  N.  C.  wShe,  it  is 
supposed,  according  to  tradition,  was  thought  to  have  had  Cherokee 
Indian  blood  in  her  veins.  At  any  rate  his  father  opposed  this  mar- 
riage and  disinherited  him,  which  caused  his  removal  to  North  Caro- 
lina, where  he  became  an  influential  and  upright  citizen  and  a  leading 
member  of  the  Friend's  Church  at  Deep  River.  By  her  he  had  eight 
children,  two  of  the  daughters  being  married  to  Elias  Henley,  of  N.  C. 
Children — Susannah  (b  Apl  24,  1780),  Elizabeth  (b  Sep  12,  1781),^////  (b 
Mch  29,  1784,  d  July  19,  1807,  in  Deep  River),  George  (see  following), 
Jane  (b  July  24,  1788,  d  Mch  7,  1825,  in  Deep  River),  Martha  (b  July  6, 
1791,  d  Mch  10,  i85i,in  Deep  River),  Judith  (b  Mch  24,  1794,  d  abt  i860 
in  Ind),  John  (b  Sept  12,  1796,  d  in  1856  near  Wabash,  Ind,  kicked  by  a 
horse,  m  Abigail  Coffin  (d  1855),  fifth  in  descent  from  Tristram  Coffin, 
of  Nantucket,  Mass.,  and  had  Susannah,  Martha,  and  other  daughters, 
and  sons,  Thomas  D.,  of  Lawrence,  Kas.,  and  William  G.,  of  Columbus, 
Ohio,    lecturer,  and  publisher  of  temperance   literature.    John  was  a 


82  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

strong-  abolitionist,  and  in  the  Spring  of  1844  he  was  compelled  to  leave 
Deep  River  for  the  Northwest  by  the  slaveholders,  which  he  did  upon 
horseback,  his  family  following  him  in  the  ensuing  Fall),  and  Sarah  (b 
Dec  26,  1798,  d  Sep  11,  1825,  in  Deep  River).  John  then  married  a 
niece  of  his  first  wife  in  1804,  one  Sarah  Patterson,  of  Muddy  Creek 
Meeting,  Stokes  County,  N.  C,  and  had  Jemima  (b  in  Deep  River  Feb 
25,  1805,  d  1880  in  Kansas,  m  Eli  Vestal  and  lived  awhile  in  Plainfield, 
Ind.) 

GEORGE — b  Apl  14,  1786,  in  Virginia,  d  in  Monrovia,  Ind.,  in  1870. 
He  was  a  man  of  firm  and  upright  character,  of  amiable  disposition,  and 
enjoyed  the  eventful  experiences  of  pioneer  life.  He  first  settled  in 
Wayne  County  but  removed  afterward  to  Morgan  County,  and  was  also 
a  member  of  the  Friends  Church.  About  1806  he  married  Nancy 
Shields,  of  N.  C.  Children— Martha  (b  in  Guilford  1808,  d  in  Mon- 
rovia 1885,  m  Phillip  Johnson  and  had  Emetine,  Ma/don,  George,  Louisa, 
and  As/dcy),  William  B.  (see  following),  John  S.  (b  in  Guilford  181 2, 
successful  farmer  and  lawyer  in  Monrovia,  m  Abigail  Henshaw  and  had 
Jesse,  William,  Tilghman,  and  George,  all  participators  in  late  war;  m 
(2)  Catharine  Day  and  had  Mary),  Elias  (b  in  Guilford  in  1814,  d  1892 
in  Morgan  Co.,  Ind.,  m  Margaret  Gray  and  had  Mary  J.,  Malinda, 
Nancy,  Mavilda,  Margaret,  David,  Mahala,  Abigail,  and  Anna),  Thomas 
Chalkley  (b  in  Guilford  County,  N.  C,  1816,  d  in  Morgan  County  in 
1872,  but  lived  near  Coatsville,  Hendricks  Co.,  m  Pauline  Hudson  and 
had  Laura,  Lemuel,  Jane  Abner,  Charles,  etc.),  George  Hixon  (bin  Guil- 
ford 1818,  d  1872  at  Monrovia;  jolly  blacksmith,  though  devout  Methodist, 
m  Bathsheba  Sanders  and  had  Martha  J.),  Louisa  J.  (b  182 1,  m  (1) 
Abner  Blair  and  had  Lucinda,  m  (2)  Nathaniel  Carter,  of  Mooresville, 
who  d  1891),  Mary  B.  and  Anna  (b  later,  died  at  about  21  years). 

WILLIAM  B— b  1810  in  Guilford  County,  N.  C,  d  in  Sep.,  1863,  in 
Monrovia,  Ind.  He  was  a  pioneer  of  Morgan  County,  N.  C,  and  out  of 
the  green  woods  developed  a  fertile  farm.  His  word  was  received  as 
his  bond,  and  he  belonged  to  the  Friends  Church.     In,  or  about   1832, 

he  married  Ludah  Vestal  (d  1863-4),  dau  of  Dr.  Benjamin  and 

(Newlin)  Vestal,  of  Rocky  River,  Chatham  County,  N.  C,  also  Quakers. 
Children — Sallie  (m  Abner  Hadley,  of  Mooresville).  Martha  (m  T.  C. 
Sumner,  of  Mooresville,  and  had  Anna  and  Sallie),  Edith  (m  Henry  Cope- 
land,  now  of  Chattanooga,  Tenn.),  Nathan  E.  (m  Eliza  A.  Ballard, 
farmer  and  business  man,  mem  Friends  Ch.,  and  had  William  B., 
Byram  C,  Ludah,  Homer,  and  Edith),  Rhoda  V.  (m  William  Wilhite,  of 
Monrovia),  James  Sanders  (farmer,  stock  dealer,  county  treas  Monrovia, 
Ind.,  m  Delia  Bundy  and  had  Mary  and  Charles),  Anna  (m  Clark  Grove, 
of  Monrovia  and  had  Caswell,  Benjamin  H.,   Thomas  C,  and  Everett 


VIRGINIA    HUB  BARDS.  83 

Floyd),  William  H.  (b  Nov  14,  1848,  Haverford  Coll.,  1870,  Ind.  Med. 
Coll.,  1878;  practiced  medicine  at  Fairmount  and  Marion,  Ind.;  m  Oct 
13,  1 88 1,  Emma  J.  Woollen,  dau  William  Wesley  Woollen,  of  Eastern 
Shore,  Md.,  and  had  Sadie  W,  William  W.,  Henley  Harvey,  and  James 
Whit  all),  and  Benjamin  Vestal  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line). 


Another  branch  of  the  Virginia  Hubbard  vine  of  which  we  possess 
but  meager  information  regarding  its  American  beginning  starts  with 
DANIEL  CAMPBELL  HUBBARD,  who  was  born  in  Maryland  (?) 
Dec  23,  1746,  and  died  after  1776  in  Pittsylvania  County,  Va.  He  mar- 
ried in  Maryland  Sarah  Filpot  (bjan  5,  1756),  and  had  a  daughter  and 
a  son  Moses  (see  following). 

MOSES — b  Aug  17,  1776,  removed  with  his  parents  to  Pittsylvania 
County,  Va.,  near  head  of  Banister  Creek,  and  married  Elizabeth 
Hodges  (b  Aug  17,  1777).  They  had  five  daughters  and  sons  Daniel  Per- 
kins (see  following),  John  Nicholas  (who  removed  to  Warren  Co.,  Mo, 
with  his  family),  Barton  (who  settled  in  Lincoln  Co.,  Mo,  with  his 
brother  Harrison),  Harrison  and  Josiah  (who  migrated  to  St.  Charles 
Co.,  Mo),  and  Moses  Allen. 

DANIEL  PERKINS  HUBBARD— b  in  Pittsylvania  Co.,  Va.,  Oct  16, 
1799,  m  Apl  28,  1825,  Joanna  Lawson  Carter  (b  Jan  2,  1802),  dau  Jesse 
Carter  (b  Nov  30,  1770)  and  gr  dau  Thomas  Carter  (b  near  Richmond, 
Va,  Nov  29,  1734).  They  first  settled  upon  or  near  the  head  of  Toma- 
hawk Creek,  about  six  miles  from  his  birthplace,  and  then  in  1836,  with 
his  family  and  also  his  brother's  (John  Nicholas),  he  rem  to  Warren 
Co.,  Mo,  and  settled  as  a  farmer  near  Hickory  Grove,  where  he  died 
Oct  12,  1843.  Children — Moses  (see  following),  Jesse  Carter  (b  Mch 
31,  1833,  m  1S73  Ellen  Newman,  of  Farmersville,  Collier  Co.,  Tex,  and 
had  Claude  Newman,  Joanna  L.,  Mary,  Willie,  and  Alia),  Elizabeth  C, 
Susan  W.,  Martha  Ann,  Winifred  B.,  Judith  B.,  Joanna  L.,  and  Re- 
becca D.  P. 

MOSES — b  in  Hickory  Grove,  Va,  July  31,  1827,  removed  with  his 
parents,  brother  and  five  sisters  (who  were  born  there  also)  to  Warren 
Co.,  Mo,  where  he  managed  the  farm  for  his  mother  for  several  years 
after  his  father's  death,  and  then  studied  medicine,  graduating  in  1856 
from  St.  Louis  Medical  College.  He  first  practiced  in  Henry  Co.,  Mo, 
where  he  m  June  26,  1S59,  Mary  Jane  Sutton.  Losing  his  property  by 
the  war  he  returned  to  Warren  Co.,  and  in  1866,  with  his  brother  Jesse 
Carter,  removed  to  Texas,  and  settled  at  Roseland,  Collier  Co.  Chil- 
dren— Alla  (b  July  3,  i860,  gr  1880  from  Pritchett  School  Inst.,  Glas- 
gow, Mo.,  standing  high  in  scholarship,  m  Dr.  B.  F.  Spenser,  of  Weston, 
Collier  Co.,  Tex.,  and  d  childless  Dec.  1,  18S9). 


84 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


There  was  also  a  WILLIAM  HUBBARD,  b  abt  1730,  who  had  a  son 
Harrison,  b  abt  1755,  of  Patrick  County,  Va.,  who  had  sons  William,  b 
abt  1776;  Asa,  b  abt  1778;  Moses,  b  abt  1780;  and  Daniel,  b  abt  1782, 
who  rem  to  Madison  County,  Ky.,  and  had  John,  of  Clay  County,  Mo., 
who  had  Moses  of  Liberty,  Mo.,  and  Col.  Walter,  of  Springfield,  Mo. 

There  is  said  to  have  been  a  Col.  BENJAMIN  HUBBARD  who  came 
direct  from  England,  settled  in  King  William  County  and  married  Mary 
Todd  (b  1747).  Among  other  children  he  had  Ann,  who  married  Col. 
James  Taylor,  of  the  War  of  the  Revolution,  and  a  member  of  the  Vir- 
ginia House  of  Burgess.  [This  tradition,  as  sent  in  by  a  descendant, 
seems  not  to  be  reliable.] 


GOV.    RICHARD    BENNET    HUBBARD 
of  Texas. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Virginia.) 


i,  ^     ^f,^JiBPf    Salisbury,  Mass. 

God  sifted  a  whole  nation  that   He  might  send    choice  grain   into  the   wilderness-  William 
Stoughton. 


Eaton's  History  of  Candia,  N.  H.  (published  at  Manchester,  N.  H.,  in  1852),  gives  an  account, 
among  those  of  other  early  settlers,  of  the  entree  into  America  of  the  progenitor  of  this  branch  of  New 
England  Hubbards.  It  reads  as  follows:  "  In  the  good  old  days  of  yore,  says  tradition,  there  was  born 
in  England  one  RICHARD  HUBBARD,  probably  of  a  family  in  easy  circumstances,  if  not  wealthy. 
An  uncle,  living  in  France,  offered  to  make  RICHARD  his  heir.  Accordingly,  his  passage  was  paid 
across  the  channel  by  his  father.  But  fortune  had  determined  otherwise  than  that  he  should  become 
a  citizen  of  France,  where  his  descendants  might  have  lost  their  heads  in  the  chances  of  revolutii  m. 
The  captain  of  the  vessel  proving  to  be  a  rogue,  our  young  voyager  was  carried  to  the  West  Indies 
and  sold  for  his  passage  money.  There  he  was  bound  an  apprentice  to  a  blacksmith.  After  serving 
his  time,  the  New  World— then  the  El  Dorado  of  all  adventurous  spirits— attracted  his  attention,  and 
he  came  to  Boston  He  was  there  married  and  had  two  sons,  one  of  whom  moved  to  Salisbury, 
Mass.    *    *    *  " 

HOW  much  of  the  foregoing  version  is  true  and  how  much  mythical 
it  would  be  hard  at  this  late  date  to  determine  in  the  absence  of  well- 
authenticated  records.  From  what  source  Mr.  F.  B.  Eaton  derived  this 
account  is  not  known.  He  says  "  tradition  ".  If  it  were  a  family  tra- 
dition it  is  entitled  to  a  little  weight,  but  if  simply  a  promiscuous  tra- 
dition of  the  town,  but  little  reliance  ought  to  be  placed  upon  it.  The 
account  is  probably  in  error  in  stating  that  two  sons  were  born  in  Bos- 
ton.   The  Salisbury  records  show  that  they  were  all  born  in  Salisbury* 

*  There  is  some  room  for  belief,  however,  that  this  RICHARD  HUBBARD  of  Salisbury  was  born 
about  1043  and  was  the  son  of  an  earlier  Richard  who  came  into  New  England  and  may  have  been  the 
Richard  mentioned  in  a  work  edited  by  John  Camden  Hotten  and  published  in  London  in  1874.  It  was 
compiled  from  records  in  London,  and  is  entitled  "The  Original  Lists  of  Persons  of  Quality,"  who 
left  that  port  between  1600  and  1700.  The  extract  relating  to  Richard  Hubbard  thus  reads:  "  May  21- 
1635-Theis  under  written  are  to  be  transportd  to  St.  Christophers,  imbarqued  in  the  Mathew,  of  Lon- 
don, Richard  Goodladd,  Mr.  per  warrant  from  ye  Earl  of  Carlisle:  James  Hubbard,  age  27;  Richard 
Hubbard  age  18  [and  others]."  The  '-James  Hubbard  "  mentioned  may  have  been  "  Jamesof  Water- 
town,  Mass.."  who  died  there  in  1639  (see  Early  Hubbard  settlers).  [Since  the  foregoing  was  pre- 
pared the  compiler  finds  data  in  some  Douglas  Hubbard  manuscripts  which  may  be  in  the  main  cor- 
rect ro  means  remaining  now  for  discovering  the  source  from  winch  the  late  Douglas  Hubbard 
secured  his  information.    He  records  that  "  RICHARD  HUBBARD,  b  about  1620,  from  Surrey  County, 

85 


86  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

Before  going  to  Salisbury  it  appears  that  he  lived  awhile  in  Dover,  N. 
H.  Dover  records  show' that  "  Dec.  n,  1658,  RICHARD  HUBBARD 
was  not  taxed."  He  may  have  had  a  brother;  there  was  a  "  Mr.  Hu- 
bard  "  mentioned  in  Exeter,  N.  H.,  town  records  May  4,  1636;  also  in 
1667  "Captain  Hubbard  and  Josiar  Hubbard."  July  26,  1669,  Jeremiah 
Hubbard  of  Portsmouth,  N.  H.,  was  witness  to  a  deed  from  "  ffrancis 
Champnowne  to  Abraham  Corbett,  both  of  Kittery,  Me."  He  married 
Martha  Allen  (b  in  Salisbury  in  1646,  d  there  Oct.  4,  17 18),  dau  of 
William  and  Ann*  (Goodale)  Allen,  and  is  spoken  of  as  a  man  of  influ- 
ence and  property,  being  styled  "  Mr."  then  a  title  of  some  importance 
and  only  worn  by  authority.  In  1690  he  was  made  freeman,  and  in 
1694-5  he  represented  Salisbury  in  the  General  Court.  For  some  years 
he  lived  in  Boston  on  Fort  Hill,  removing  there  in  1697.  This  residence 
he  gave  to  his  son  Joseph  March  24,  1706,  or  rather  at  that  time  what 
he  termed  in  the  deed  as  the  "  Easternmost  part  or  End  of  our  now 
Dwelling  hous."  To  all  of  his  sons  and  daughters  during  the  latter 
years  of  his  life  he  gave  away  much  of  his  landed  property,  some  of  it 
being  located  in  Amesbury,  Mass.  He  died  in  Salisbury — "  Mr.  RICH- 
ARD HUBBARD  departed  this  life  June  ye  26th,  17 19."  Children  (all 
born  in  Salisbury — Mary  (b  Jan  19,  1667,  m  Nov  17,  1686,  Tobias  Lang- 

Eng..  came  to  Boston  in  1640  from  Jamaica,  West  Indies,  and  married  Hannah  Parker  of  the  Mass. 
Colony,  dying  in  Salisbury,  Mass.,  in  1(390,  and  leaving  children  Hannah  (b  1047,  m  Thomas  Eaton), 
Joseph  (b  1649),  Mary  (b  1653,  m  Albert  Huse),  and  Jeremiah  lb  1651.  went  to  Conn.,  1676,  thence  to 
Long  Island,  m  Sarah  Bartlett,  and  had  Sarah,  b  1680;  Jeremiah,  b  1682;  Hannah,  b  1684;  Richard,  b 
1686;  Anne,  b  1688;  John,  b  1690;  Martha,  b  1692;  and  Isaac  (see  following). 

"  ISAAC— b  1694,  d  1771.  m  Bertha  Goldsmith,  lived  in  Sonthold,  L.  I.  Children-TsAAC  (1)  1731)> 
Bertha  (b  1733),  Thomas  (b  1735,  d  1755),  John  (b  1739,  of  Mattituck,  had  John,  b  1764),  William  (b 
1727,  d  1772  in  Southold,  L.  I.,  had  William  b  1752,  d  in  New  York  in  1824;  John  b  1754;  Bvtler  b  1758; 
and  Nathaniel  b  1762),  and  Richard  (b  1724,  d  1796  in  Sonthold,  m  Mary  Hallock  and  had  Mary  b  1749; 
Bertha,  b  1753;  Daniel,  b  1755;  Benjamin  b  1757.  d  1777;  and  Richard,  b  1751,  d  in  New  York  1821,  m 
Mary  Tnthill  and  had  Lodicy  b  1790,  m  William  Dayton,  Jeanette  b  1794  m  Samuel  Wilkie,  Olive  b  179S 
m  (1)  Samuel  Mcintosh  (2)  David  Young,  Nathaniel  (see  following),  and  Richard  (see  following). 

"NATHANIEL,  second  child  of  Richard  and  Mary  (Tuthill)  Hubbard,  was  b  in  1792,  lived  in  New 
Yrork,  m  Susan  Logan.  Children— Mary  (b  1810,  m  Henry  Chenery)  Walter  (b  1818,  m  Harriet  Pres- 
ton), Susan  (b  1820,  m  Frederic  Meyers),  Nathaniel  (b  1822),  Samuel  Qi  1S24\  Louisa  (b  1826),  William 
(b  1828),  m  Frances  Garr  and  had  Lot/is,  b  1860),  Julia  (b  1830,  m  James  Salter),  Cyrus  (b  1832),  and 
Phebe  (b  1834,  m  Louis  Marie). 

"RICHARD,  fourth  child  of  Richard  and  Mary  (Tuthill)  Hubbard,  of  New  York,  was  born  in  1796, 
lived  in  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  called  "captain"  and  "mariner,"  m  (1)  Susan  Yates  (2)  in  1S47  Emeline 
Douglas.  Children— Maria  (b  1825),  Richard  (b  1827,  rem  to  Lagrange,  Ind.)  Edmund  (b  1829,  lived  in 
New  York,  m  (1)  Catherine  Gray  (2)  in  1860  Alice  Gray  and  had  Lillie  b  1850,  Maria,  b  1854,  and  Arthur 
b  1850),  Susan  (b  1831),  William  (b  1848,  d  1880),  Emeline  (b  1850),  Maria  (b  1852),  and  Isabelle  (b 
1854)  "] 

The  compiler  found  nothing  in  Ins  investigations  showing  the  existence  of  this  earliest  Richard, 
his  son  Jeremiah  and  his  descendants,  yet  it  could  all  be  easily  missed  by  him,  and  no  time  now  re- 
mains for  him  to  verify  its  accuracy.  The  late  Douglas  Hubbard  must  have  certainly  found  some- 
thing as  a  basis  for  these  statements. 

*  Ann  Goodale  was  daughter  of  Dorothy  and  Richard  Ooodale  of  Yarmouth,  Norfolk,  Eng.,  who 
came  to  Newberry,  Mass.,  in  1638,  and  to  Salisbury  about  1639  or  1640.  Ann  had  a  brother  Richard  in 
Boston  who  possibly  was  the  Richard  Goodale  who  went  to  Middleton,  Ct.  Her  grandfather  died  in 
1666. 


Statue  of  Governor  Richard  Dudley   Hubbard  in  the 
State  Capitol  Grounds  at  Hartford,  Ct. 


87 


33! 


:rf^' 


GOVERNOR   JOHN    HUBBARD 
of  Hallowell,  Maine. 

(Descended  from  Richard  Hubbard  of  Salisbury,  Mass.) 


88 


RICHARD  HUBBARD,   OF  SALISBURY,   MASS.  89 

don  of  Portsmouth,  ancestor  of  Gov  Langdon  of  N.  H.,  and  had  Eliza- 
beth, b  Nov  17,  1687;  Tobias,  b  Oct  11,  1689;  Martlia,  b  Mch  7,  1692-3; 
Richard,  b  Apl  14,  1694,  m  Thankful  Hubbard,  dau  Joseph  and  Thank- 
ful (Bowbridge-Brown)  Hubbard;  Joseph,  b  Feb  28,  1695-6;  Marks,  b 
Sep  15,  1698;  Samuel,  b  Sep  6,  1700;  William,  b  Oct  30,  1702;  and  John, 
b  May  28,  1707),  A1  John  (see  elsewhere),  infant  child  (b  and  d  1672), 
Dorothy  (b  July  17,  1673,  m  John  Stevens,  and  had  among-  others 
Hubbard  who  was  mentioned  in  his  grandfather's  (Richard)  will  in 
1718),  Bl  Joseph  (see  elsewhere),  Judith  (b  July  9,  1679,  d  after  1718, 
m  Nov  7,  1699,  Obadiah  Emmons  of  Boston),  Comfort  (b  Jan  17,  1681- 

2,  m  Nov  7,  1699,  Joshua  Weeks),  Jemima  (b  Nov  11,  1684,  m  by  Justice 
Wire  of  Hampton  to  William  Haskell  of  Gloucester;  mar.  intention  pub 
Apl  26,  1712),  Keziah  (b  Nov  11,  1684,  m  Dec  16,  1 701,  Joseph  True, 
both  of  Salisbury — "  Joyned  in  marriage  by  Mr.  Caleb  Gushing,*  minister 
of  ye  Gospel"),  Richard  (b  Mch  9,  1686-7,  d  Jan  2°>  1687-8),  and 
C1  Eleazer  (see  elsewhere). 

SONS    OF    RICHARD    AND    MARTHA    (ALLEN)   HUBBARD. 

A1  JOHN— b  Apl  *~,  1669,  d  in  Kingston,  Rockingham  Co.,  N.  H., 
Aug  1,  1703,  admitted  to  Church  in  Salisbury  Aug  1,  1703.  He  was 
called  "  Lieut."  and  rem  to  Kingston  about  1704  or  1705;  m  1688  Jane 
Collensby,  adm  to  Salisbury  Church  Feb  5,  1698-9,  dismissed  to  King- 
ston Church  in  1725.  Children  (born  in  Salisbury) — Richard  and  John 
(b  Jan  17,  1690,  d  y),  A"  Jeremiah  (see  elsewhere),  Mary  (b  Nov  29, 
1694),  ft3  Richard  (see  elsewhere),  Martha  (b  Oct  8,  1698),  Jane  (b 
June  10,  1700),  Anna  (b  July  22,  1702,  d  1775,  m  Rev  William  Thomp- 
son of  Scarboro,  Me.,  and  had  William,  Esq.,  of  Scarboro;  John,  Rev., 
preached  in  South  Berwick,  Me.;  and  Anna  who  m  Joseph  Gerrish — 
their  gr.  child  was  Gov  Goodwin  of  N.  H.),  Keziah  (b  July  10,  1704,  m 
Jan  1,  1734,  John  Libby  of  Scarboro),  Dorothy  (b  in  Kingston  Jan  8, 
1708),  John  (b  in  Kingston  July  21,  1706,  d  Sep  6,  1706),  Jemima  (b  Mch 

3,  1711,  d  Dec  8,  1768,  m  (?)  John  Messerve,b  Mch  21,  1708,  d  in  Scarboro 
Mch  9,  1762)  and  John  (b  Jan  28,  17 15). 

B1  Joseph — bin  Salisbury  June  4,  1676,  d  in  Boston  Apl  9,  1761,  m 
at  Boston  Aug  4,  1698,  Thankful  (Bowbridge?)  Brown  of  Sudbury,  dau 
of  Thomas  Brown,  alias  Beobridge,"  who  d  in  Boston  in  17 11.  Through 
this  marriage  he  became  possessed  of  a  realty  in  London.  JOSEPH  was 
taught  the  art  of  blacksmithing,  and  at  the  same  time  was  a  prominent 
official  and  dignitary  of  Boston,  being  entitled  to  the  distinction  of 
"  proprietor  "  and  "  gentleman."  He  served  a  period  as  constable,  and 
was  Deputy  to  the  General  Court  in  1694-5.     He  acquired  much  prop- 

*  From  him  descended  Hon.  Caleb  Cushing,  the  American  statesman. 


9o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

erty  and  lived  becomingly  on  Fort  Hill.*  His  will  dated  May  17,  1757, 
and  probated  Apl  17,  1761,  names  among  others  his  brother  Eleazer, 
niece  Thankful,  and  her  brother  Joseph.  Children  (born  in  Boston) — 
Thankful  (b  Dec  25,  1699),  m  May  27,  17 18,  Richard  Langdon,  son  of 
Tobias  and  Mary  (Hubbard)  Langdon,  and  had  Thomas),  B2  Thomas 
(see  elsewhere),  Martha  (b  Aug  27,  1705,  d  Oct  3,  1706),  Martha  (b 
Jan  12,  1707,  m  Jan  n,  1731,  Joseph  Allen),  Joseph  (b  Jan  8,  1709, 
mariner,  d  before  Apl  29,  1755,  m  Jan  3,  1739,  Elizabeth  Pierce  (who  m 
Oct  23,  1746,  Nehemiah  Robbins)  and  had  Thomas,  Joseph,  and  a  "re- 
puted daughter,"  Elizabeth,  who  was  left  a  legacy  of  ^13  by  her  grand- 
father JOSEPH),  and  Eunice  (b  Sep  18,  17 12,  m  Feb  2,  1737,  Joseph 
Sherburne,  who  died  before  1757). 

C1  ELEAZER— b  in  Salisbury  Oct  27,  1689,  d  there  in  1773;  will 
probated  Apl  27,  1773.  He  was  called  "  Captain,"  and  "  gent,"  and  was 
admitted  to  the  church  in  1727.  He  was  married  by  Rev  John  White 
Dec  16,  17 1 2,  to  Dorcas  Haskell  of  Gloucester,  who  was  admitted  to  the 
church  Sep  12,  17 14.  Children  (born  in  Salisbury) — Dorcas  (b  Oct  23, 
1713,  m  Oct  30,  1761,  Andrew  Haskell),  C2  Joseph  (see  elsewhere),  Mary 
(b  Mch  31,  17 18,  m  (?)  John  March,  and  "owned  the  covenant  Feb  2, 
1752,"),  Martha  (b  Oct  4,  1719,  m  Nov  28,  1745,  John  Sawyer  of 
Gloucester,  Mass),  Thankful  (b  Mch  6,  1721,  mentioned  in  her  Uncle 
Joseph's  will,  m  Abraham  Eaton  and  had,  among  others,  Eleazar,  b  Oct 
30,  1759),  Judith  (b  Feb  26,  1722-3,  was  m  Jan  29,  1750,  to  John  March 
"by  Caleb  Cushing  Jr,  Justice  of  the  Peace"),  Dorothy  (b  Nov  3«, 
1724,  d  1767,  m  Dec  16,  1742,  Isaac  Haskell  of  Gloucester,  Mass,  and  had 
Doreas  and  Thankful),  and  infant  child  (d  Dec  7,  1729). 

SONS  OF  JOHN   AND    JANE    (COLLENSBY)   HUBBARD. 

A2  JEREMIAH — b  in  Salisbury,  Mass,  Aug  27,  1692,  removed  about 
1704-5  with  his  parents  to  Kingston,  N.  H.,  and  died  there.  He  married 
Feb  28,  1722,  at  Haverhill,  Mass.,  Mercy  Johnson.  Children  (b  in  King- 
ston)— Mercy  (b  Mch  26,  1732),  Joseph  (b  Mch  11,  1723-4,  din  Kingston 
Mch  18,  1756),  Jane  (b  Feb  5,  1725-6),  and  Richard  (b  Aug  11,  1728,  d 
in  Kingston  Apl  21,  1755). 

A3  RICHARD — b  in  Salisbury,  Mass,  Dec  27,  1696,  rem  abt  1704-5 
to  Kingston,  N.  H.,  with  his  parents  and  died  there.  He  was  called 
"  Captain  ",  and  is  mentioned  in  his  grandfather's  (Richard)  will  in  17 18. 
He  married  Dec  27,  1722,  at  Haverhill,  Mass,  (1)  Abigail  Davis  (d  Sep 

*  One  of  the  three  principal  heights  of  Boston,  quite  rugged,  and  rising  to  a  height  of  eighty  feet 
a  little  ways  back  from  Hubbard's  Wharf  on  the  southeasterly  coast  of  Boston  peninsula.  It  was 
razed  to  the  ground  a  few  years  ago  and  is  now  called  Fort  Hill  Square.  Hubbard's  Whaif  has  also 
disappeared.  It  was  close  to  Griffin's  Wharf,  where  the  Boston  Tea  Party  held  their  sociable,  so  un- 
like tea  parties  of  the  present  day. 


RICHARD  HUBBARD,   OF  SALISBURY,    MASS.         gi 

25,  1733)  and  (2)  Abigail  Taylor  (d  Dec  9,  1768).  Children  (by  Abigail 
Davis)— Dorothy  (b  July  25,  1723,  m  1741,  Samuel  Small  of  Scarboro), 
Elizabeth  (b  Sep  25,  1724,  m  at  Scarboro,  Mass.,  Dec  25,  1745,  Samuel 
Libby),  Martha  (b  Nov  6,  1726),  Abigail  (b  Nov  22,  1728),  Grace  (b 
Sep  22,  1730,  d  y),  and  A4  John  (see  elsewhere).  Children  (by  Abigail 
Taylor)— Mary  (b  May  21,  1735,  m  Apl  15,  1756,  John  Stevens),  Grace 
(b  Jan  8,  1736-7,  m  July  13,  1758,  Samuel  Stuart),  Anne  (b  Oct  17,  1738), 
Margaret  (b  Aug  30,  1740),  A5  Richard  (see  elsewhere),  Benjamin 
(b  Nov  12,  1744),  Sarah    (b  Nov   10,   1751),  and  Jedediah  (b  July  16, 

1755)- 

SON  OF  RICHARD  AXD   ABIGAIL  (DAVIS)    HUBBARD. 

A4  JOHN— b  in  Kingston,  N.  H.,  Apl  12,  1733,  became  a  leading 
physician  of  the  place.  He  m  Apl  30,  1754,  Joanna  Davis,  b  1733,  d 
1807,  in  Readfield,  Kennebec  Co,  Me,  where  the  family  removed  in 
17S4.  Children  (born  in  Kingston)— Margaret  (b  Apl  2,  1755)-  Nancy 
(b  Feb  25,  1757),  A6  JOHN  (see  elsewhere),  Francis  (b  Dec  17,  1761), 
and  Richard  (b  May  1,  1764). 

SON   OF  RICHARD  AND  ABIGAIL  (TAYLOR)    HUBBARD. 

A5  RICHARD— b  in  Kingston  Dec  3,  1742,  of  the  second  wife  of 
A3  Richard,  d  there  Nov  11,  1780,  and  m  Dec  21,  1762,  Elizabeth  Web- 
ster. He  was  a  lieutenant  and  afterward  Captain  in  the  War  of  the 
Revolution.  Children  (bin  Kingston)— Abigail  (bjuly  10,  1762),  Ben- 
jamin (b  Oct  24,  1766),  Mary  (b  July  24,  1768),  Dorcas  (b  Feb  14,  1772, 
m  (?)  Mch  3,  1795,  John  Conant  of  Topsfield),  John  Hills  (b  Nov  2, 
1773),  Elizabeth  (b  July  12,  1776),  and  Richard  (b  Dec  18,  1779). 

SON   OF  JOHN   AND  JOANNA   (DAVIS)    HUBBARD. 

^6  jOHX_b  in  Kingston,  N.  H.,  Sep  28,  1759,  removed  with  parents  to 
Readfield,  Kennebec  Co,  Me,  in  1784,  studied  medicine  with  his  father 
and  there  practiced  his  profession,  having  for  a  few  years  previously 
practiced  at  New  Hampton,  Belknap  Co.,  N.  H.  He  died  in  Readfield 
Apl  22,  1838.  His  wife  was  Olive  Wilson,  b  in  Brentwood,  Rockingham 
Co.,  N.  H.,  in  1761,  and  d  in  Readfield  Oct  20,  1847.  Children— Oliyia 
(b  Mch  1,  1786,  d  unm  Apl  22,  1838),  Sophia  (b  Feb  21,  1788,  d  Feb  14, 
1872,  m  Henry  Carleton,  b  1784,  d  Apl  5,  1870;  both  lived  and  died  in 
Augusta,  Me.),  Mary  (b  Apl  26,  1790,  in  Readfield,  Me.,  d  July  28,  1871, 
at  Monmouth  Centre,  Me.,  m  Orchard  Cook  of  Wiscasset,  Me.,  and  had 
-John,  Charles,  Eliza  and  Wesley),  Nancy  (b  July  15,  1792,  <*  Nov  25, 
1S56,  m  Ichabod  Rollins,  b  Mch  22,  1798,  alive  in  1874,  of  Cambridge, 
Mass.,  a  farmer  and  school  teacher,  son  of  James  and  Sally  (Alley)  Rol- 
lins of  New  Sharon,  and  had  Henry  C,  b  Oct  22,  1S19;  Ichabod,  b  July 


9 2  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

22,  1821;  Tliomas  H.,  b  June  1,  1823;  William,  b  Jan  24,  1825,  and  Joanna 
H.,  b  May  12,  1827,  m  Samuel  Watson  of  Parkman,  Me.;  Ichabod  Rol- 
lins m  (2)  Mary  Chadbourne  of  Cambridge),  John  (see  Prominent 
American  Hubbards),  Thomas  (b  Apl  23,  1795,  in  Readfield,  Me.,  d  Aug 
26,  1827,  unm,  at  Cabin  Point,  Surry  County,  Va.,  a  physician),  Eliza 
(b  Oct  16,  1796,  m  (1)  Dr  William  Case  of  Readfield,  rem  South,  m  (2) 
Alexis  Sappington  of  Louisiana),  Velina  (b  Sep  16,  1798,  d  Mch  16, 
1804),  Cyrus  (b  1800,  rem  to  Iowa),  Greenleaf  (b  Mch  11,  1801,  d  Feb 
24,  1885,  farmer,  lived  at  Parkman,  or  Harmony,  Me.),  Joanna  (b  Oct 
18,  1802,  d  Feb  2,  1890,  m  Rev  David  Copeland  and  had.  Justin  M.,  rem 
to  Southern  Cal.,  and  Olive,  m  (1)  Col.  Paine,  lawyer,  killed  near  At- 
lanta, Ga.,  (2)  Mr  Lay  of  Chicago,  deceased;  she  lives  near  Los  Angeles, 
Cal.),  and  Sarah  (b  Aug  7,  1805,  d  Sep  24,  1805). 

SON   OF  JOSEPH   AND   THANKFUL  (BROWN)    HUBBARD. 

B3  THOMAS — b  in  Boston,  Mass,  Aug  4,  1702,  d  there  July  14,  1773. 
THOMAS,  like  his  father,  Joseph  Hubbard,  "blacksmith,"  was  taught 
a  trade,  that  of  "brazier."  He  owned  a  brazier's  establishment  at  the 
head  of  the  "  Towne  Dock  ",  Boston,  as  late  as  June  30,  1749.  He  grad- 
uated from  Harvard  College  in  1721,  and  from  1750  to  1773  was  its 
Treasurer.*  April  9,  1739,  he  was  elected  deacon  of  the  famous  Old 
South  Church,  Boston,  and  held  that  position  until  he  resigned  Jan  23, 
1764.  He  held  also  many  other  positions  of  trust,  being  Indian  Com- 
missioner to  treat  with  the  Indians  at  Fort  St.  George  (now  Warren, 
Me.),  a  member  of  the  Boston  Council,  Speakerf  of  the  Legislature,  and 
also  a  large  landholder  or  "  proprietor  "  of  many  surrounding  towns, 
notably  Sheepscott  (York  Co.  Me.),  Damariscotta,  Princetown,  Hub- 
bardstown  (named  after  him),  and  Royalston,  being  Treasurer  of  the 
latter  town.  Dec  8,  1737,  he  bought  of  the  executors  for  ^600  the 
Leonard  Vassall  mansion  (afterward  appraised  at  ^1,000)  on  Summer 
Street,  formerly  owned  by  Simeon  Stoddard,  where  he  resided  until 
his  death.  An  early  map  of  Boston  shows  the  location  of  this  mansion. 
A  long  obituary  of  him  appears  in  the  Massachusetts  Gazette,  dated 
Boston  July   26,   1773.     The  following  is  an   extract  from  it:  "But  if 

*  His  portrait  hangs  in  Memorial  Hall,  Harvard  University,  Cambridge,  Mass.  It  was  executed 
by  John  Singleton  Copley,  a  very  famous  gentleman  of  the  brush  in  those  days,  and  shows  him  as  a 
pleasant,  smooth-faced  gentleman,  largely  bald,  dressed  in  gown  and  university  habit,  with  the 
Treasurer's  keys  lying  upon  a  table  beside  him.  His  headgear  resembles  a  Turkish  turban,  and  is  not 
of  college  distinction.  Many  of  Copley's  portraits  have  this  odd-looking  covering  on  the  heads  of  his 
subjects.  It  seemed  to  be  a  "fad"  of  his.  Thomas  Hubbard's  successor  was  John  Hancock,  who 
made  a  poor  college  treasurer,  though  a  distinguished  patriot  and  gifted  statesman. 

tMay  14,1751,  Hon.  James  Allen,  Mr.  John  Tyng,  Mr.  Harrison  Gray,  and  the  Hon.  THOMAS 
HUBBARD  were  electecURepresentatives.  The  three  first-named  gentlemen  had  253,  263,  and  300  votes 
respectively,  but  Mr.  HUBBARD  had  "a  great  majority.'  " 


RICHARD   HUBBARD,    OF  SALISBURY,   MASS.         93 

there  was  any  one  Virtue  more  conspicuous  in  this  good  Man  than  an- 
other, it  seems  to  have  been  the  Charity  and  Liberality  of  his  Heart; 
a  more  soft  and  tender,  a  more  sympathizing  or  more  liberal  Disposi- 
tion, no  Man  perhaps  ever  experienced.  *  *  *  His  House  was  a 
Temple  of  Hospitality:  Oft  did  fill  the  Hands  of  the  Indigent,  oft  wipe 
away  the  Tears  of  Poverty,  and  Distress,  and  how  often  has  he  caused 
the  Widow's  Heart  to  sing  for  Joy."  In  (?)  Lot  70,  Old  Granary  Burying- 
ground  on  Tremont  Street  he  was  buried.  A  bluestone  sculptured  tab- 
let on  the  tomb  close  enough  to  be  touched  by  the  hand  from  the  street 
shows  in  strong  relief  a  Hubbard  coat-of-arms,  surmounted  by  a  knight's 
head,   and   over   all  a  griffin's  head.*     A  fac  simile  of  his  signature: 


His  will  dated  June  21,  1773,  probated  July  23,  1775,  makes  many 
charitable  bequests.  To  Harvard  College  is  given  ^300  and  such 
books  in  his  library  as  Dr.  Andrew  Eliot  and  Samuel  Cooper  may  select; 
to  my  wife  "  all  my  negroes,  plate,  household  furniture,  chariots,  chaises, 
and  other  carriages,  horses,  provisions,  liquors,  and  other  such  like 
articles,  my  mansion  house,  stables,  and  outhouses,  situate  on  Summer 
Street,  so  called,  in  sd  Boston,  and  after  her  death  to  my  daughter  Sarah 
Fayerweather  and  son-in-law  William  Blair  Townsend."  He  bequeaths 
to  his  pastors  Rev  Mr.  Hunt  and  Rev  Air  John  Bacon  ^50  each;  to  the 
Old  South  Church  ^100;  to  the  deacons  of  Second  South  Church  ^200 
for  the  "  use  of  the  poor  of  this  sd  Town  of  Boston;"  to  Elizabeth  Green 
^30.  He  further  mentions  Thomas  Hubbard  Townsend,  Mary  Board- 
man,  and  Sarah  Fayerweather.  Executors:  Wife  Mary  Hubbard,  and 
sons-in-law  William  Blair  Townsend  and  Thomas  Fayerweather.  He 
married  Sep  10,  1724,  Mary  Jackson  (d  Feb  15,  1774),  dan  of  Edward 
and  Mary  Jackson.  (Some  historians  give  her  father  as  Jonathan  Jack- 
son, who  was  a  brazier  of  Boston.)  Children  (all  bap  in  Old  South 
Church,  Boston)— Thomas  (b  July  9,   1725,  d  July   24,   1725),  Mary  (b 


*  In  1756  and  thereafter  he  is  mentioned  in  legal  instruments  as  an  "  esquire."  There  then  exist- 
ing a  certain  punctiliousness  in  the  bestowal  of  titles  it  argues  that  he  was  either  knighted  between 
1749  (when  he  was  called  "  brazier,"  and  later  on  "merchant  ")  and  1756,  or  else  he  possessed  a  hered- 
itary right  to  the  honor  as  eldest  son  of  Joseph  Hubbard,  which  honor  the  colonists  sometimes  allowed 
to  languish.  Probably  the  latter  construction  is  the  best  one,  as  the  "  coat  "  on  his  torn!)  resembles 
the  one  granted  May  19.  1575,  to  Edward  Hubbard  of  Burchanger,  Eng.,  in  so  far  as  coats  sculptured 
in  stone  can  be  made  to  resemble  printed  drawings,  the  architectural  coat  being  of  course  minus 
many  of  the  finer  details.  The  writer  does  not  assert  positively  that  Hon.  THOMAS  was  here 
buried.  Harvard  College  records  were  searched,  but  no  traces  ot  his  burial  place  could  be  found. 
There  was  another  and  earlier  Deacon  Thomas  Hubbard  (b  1653,  d  1717),  and  some  of  his  descendants 
who  were  buried  also  in  this  cemetery  in  Lot  158  (see  Early  Settlers).  This  Deacon  Thomas  Hubbard 
also  has  a  coat-of-arms  on  his  tomb;  and  had  a  wife  Mary,  daughter  Mary,  and  son  Thomas,  and  yet 
they  both  appear  to  be  of  entirely  different  family  lines,  notwithstanding  these  coincident 
features. 


94  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

June  16,  1726,  d  Aug  15,  1726),  Mary  (b  Jan  28,  1727,  m  Feb  18,  1747, 
William  Blair  Townsend  (H.  U.  1741),  a  Boston  merchant,  and  had 
James,  b  Dec  7,  1748,  d  June  22  (?)  ;  Mary,  b  Oct  10,  1750,  d  Mch  13, 
1797,  m  Nov  1,  1770,  Andrew  Bordman,  son  of  Andrew  and  Sarah 
Bordman,  of  Cambridge,  Mass;  Thomas  Hubbard,  b  Aug  25,  1752,  m 
July  12,  1789,  at  Needham,  Esther  Newell,  and  had  Mary  Ann  Hubbard 
b  Apl  20,  1792,  who  m  July  14,  181 1,  Alpheus  Bigelow  Jr  (H.  U.  1810) 
and  had  seven  children,  who  are  supposed  to  be  the  only  living  repre- 
sentatives of  Hon.  THOMAS  HUBBARD),  Sarah  (b  Dec  1,  1730, 
m  Thomas  Fayerweather),  Thomas  (b  Oct  6,  1733,  d  Mch  18,  1733-4), 
Elizabeth  (b  April  21,  1737,  (?)  d  in  Boston  Aug  16,  1663),  Thomas  (b 
Oct  15,  1740,  d  Aug  15,  1741),  Thomas  (b  Dec  28,  1743,  d  Aug  15,  1744), 
and  Thankful  (bap  Dec  29,  1744,  d  1772,  m  1770  Dr.  Thomas  Leonard). 
[Apl  18, 1756,  was  bap  "  Dinah,  negro  servant  to  Mr.  Thomas  Hubbard  "]. 

SON    OF    ELEAZER    AND    DORCAS    (HASKELL)    HUBBARD. 

C2  JOSEPH— b  in  Salisbury,  Mass,  May  25,  17 15,  m  Dec  8,  1742, 
Elizabeth  Brown  of  Salisbury.  He  is  mentioned  in  his  uncle  Joseph's 
will  and  is  supposed  to  have  removed  from  Salisbury  after  1755. 
Children  (born  in  Salisbury) — Elizabeth  (b  Nov  22,  1743,  m  Feb  12, 
1789,  William  Weeks,  Jr,  bap  1743,  of  Greenland,  Portsmouth,  N.  H., 
and  had  seven  children),  C3  Benjamin  (see  elsewhere),  Mary  (b  Mch 
27,  1748,  m  June  27,  1769,  Thomas  True),  Abra  (b  Sep  25,  1750,  supposed 
to  have  rem  to  Candia,  N.  H.),  and  Thankful  (b  Aug  16,  1755,  men- 
tioned in  her  Uncle  Joseph's  will,  m  Dec  14,  1780,  John  Weare  of  Sea- 
brook). 

SON  OF  JOSEPH   AND  ELIZABETH  (BROWN)   HUBBARD. 

C3  BENJAMIN* — b  in  Salisbury,  Mass,  Dec  22,  1745,  d  in  Candia, 
N.  H.,  in  1821,  m  Dec  17,  1772,  Mary  Pike  (d  in  Candia  in  1851)  of  Salis- 
bury, and  removed  to  Candia  in  1772  and  lived  on  High  Street  on  a 
place  he  bought  of  James  McClure.  He  paid  taxes  in  1778  amounting 
to  £2.  gs.  gd.  2  farthings,  and  fought  under  Colonel  Stark  at  the  battle 
of  Bennington,  being  a  member  of  Lieut.  Abram  Fitts'  Co.  Children — 
C4  Joshua  (see  elsewhere),  C5  Joseph  (see  elsewhere),  and  Sally  (b 
abt  1776,  d  at  20  years). 

SONS    OF    BENJAMIN    AND    MARY    (PIKE)    HUBBARD. 

C4  JOSHUA  (following  data  only  approximately  correct) — b  in  Can- 

*  The  History  of  Candia  states  that  lie  was  once  nearly  devoured  by  wolves  while  returning  from 
mill  at  Pembroke  to  Candia  on  a  sled  drawn  by  oxen.  It  further  states  that  he  was  a  member  of  the 
guard  escorting  British  prisoners  to  Boston  after  the  Battle  of  Bennington,  and,  succumbing  to  the 
inner  voice  of  an  importunate  palate  long  nourished  on  c^rnmeal  and  salt  pork,  became  the  hero  of 
a  succcessful  foraging  party  that  supped  that  night  on  fresh  vegetables  at  the  expense  of  an  ungen- 
erous but  fat  Dutchman. 


RICHARD  HUBBARD,    OF  SALISBURY,   MASS. 


95 


dia,  X.  H.,  abt  i773,mabt  1796  Sarah  Robie,  dau  John  Robie.  Children — 
Sarah  (b  abt  1798),  Mary  (b  abt  1800,  d  y),  Mehitable  (b  abt  1802), 
Pike  (b  abt  1804),  Mary  (b  abt  1808,  m  Emery  Currier),  Robie  (b  abt 
1812),  Zebina  (b  abt  1814),  Hannah  (b  abt  1817,  m  John  Currier),  and 
Joshua  (b  abt  1810,  m  Adeline  Eaton  and  rem  to  Terra  Haute,  Ind, 
and  had  Sarah  b  abt  1845,  d  1874;  Alice,  b  abt  1847,  m  James  Hawkins; 
George,  b  abt  1843,  m  Letitia  Parker,  rem  to  111,  and  had  George,  b  abt 
1831;  Charles,  b  abt  1839,  Dartmouth  Coll,  Rev.,  lived  in  Boxford,  Mass., 
m  Emma  Chandler,  and  had  Annie,  Margaret,  Grace,  and  Thomas: 
John,  b  abt  1841,  m  (1)  Caroline  Robie  (2)  Emeline  Phillips,  rem  to  111, 
and  had  Ada,  Nellie,  John  Edward,  Louis,  and  Charles). 

C5  JOSEPH  (following  data  only  approximately  correct) — b  in  Candia, 
N.  H.,  abt  1774,  m  June  5,  1800,  Sallie  Stevens,  of  Salisbury,  Mass. 
Children — Elias  (b  abt  1802),  Mary  (b  abt  1803),  Elisha,  (b  abt  1805), 
John  (b  abt  1808,  rem  to  Dedham,  Mass),  Samuel  (b  abt  181 1),  Joseph 
(b  abt  1 8 14,  m  Susan  Rowe,  of  Candia,  and  had  Edzvard,  b  abt  1854), 
and  Benjamin  (eldest,  b  1801,  lived  in  Candia,  m  Sarah  French  and  had 
John,  b  abt  1824,  rem  to  Lydenville,  Vt.,  Elizabeth,  b  abt  1825,  m  Joel 
Smith;  Mary,  b  abt  1828,  m  Elijah  Evans;  Samuel,  b  abt  1839;  and 
Henry,  b  abt  1832,  lived  in  Candia,  m  Harriet  Longford,  and  had  Henry, 
b  abt  1855).  _  er^ 


HON.  THOMAS  HUBBARD, 
Treasurer  of  Harvard  College  (See  page  92). 

(From  a  Photograph  by  Phineas  Ilubbard  of  Cambridge.) 
Descended  from  Richard  Ilubbard  of  Salisbury. 


LIEUT.  ELMER  WILCOX  HUBBARD,  U    S.  A. 

Third  Artillery,  now  at  Fortress  Jlonroe,  Va. 
(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.) 


96 


/Military /v1aval» 

*  (OLLE6E  (JRADUAfl 

Our  liberty,  safety,  life,  estate,  parents,  country,  and  children  are  by  valor  preserved  and  de- 
fended— Marcus  Aeolus  Pluutus. 


THE  United  States  Military  Academy  at  West  Point,  N.  Y.,  has  had 
but  one  Hubbard  graduate.  Lieut.  ELMER  WILCOX  HUB- 
BARD, U.  S.  A.,  of  Connecticut,  enjoys  this  solitary  distinction.  He  was 
born  in  Cromwell,  Ct.,  Sept.  27,  1861;  entered  West  Point  July  1,  1881; 
graduated  thirteenth  from  the  top  in  a  class  of  thirty-nine  June  13,  1885; 
commissioned  2d  Lieut.  June  14,  1885,  and  assigned  to  the  1st  Artillery; 
promoted  1st  Lieut.  June  13,  1892,  and  transferred  to  the  3d  Artillery. 
He  is  the  only  son  of  Daniel  Roberts  and  Lucetta  Mildrum  (Wilcox) 
Hubbard,  and  comes  of  "  fighting  blood,"  his  ancestors  having  partici- 
pated in  the  Revolutionary  War  and  his  father  in  the  late  civil  war  (see 
Abridged  Descent  Line). 

Lieut.  HUBBARD  has  seen  frontier  service,  having  been  stationed  at 
Fort  Canby,  Wash.,  and  at  the  Presidio,  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  since  re- 
ceiving his  commission.  August  28,  1889,  he  was  detailed  for  duty  at 
West  Point  as  Instructor  Professor  of  Chemistry,  Mineralogy,  and 
Geology.  August  17,  1893,  he  rejoined  his  regiment  at  Fort  McPherson, 
Ga.  April  2,  1892,  he  married  Adele  Louise  Constans,  of  Alsace,  and 
has  one  child,  Ruth,  b  May  15,  1893. 

NAVAL   GRADUATES. 

The  following  is  the  Graduate  List  of  HUBBARDS  from  the  U.  S.  Naval  Academy  at  Annapolis, 
Md.,  as  furnished  by  that  Institution: 

SOCRATES,  b  in  Scienceville,  N.Y.;  appointed  from  Boone  County, 
Mo.,  Dec  24,  186 1 ;  Midshipman  July  16,  1862;  grad  1865;  Ensign,  Dec 
1,  1866;  Master,  Mch  12,  1868;  Lieut,  Mch  26,  1869;  Lieut  Commander, 
Oct  27,  1879;  retired,  as  Lieut  Commander,  June  18,  1888;  residing  in 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y.  JOHN,  born  in  South  Berwick,  York  County,  Me.; 
appointed  from  Arizona  July  25,  1866;  Midshipman,  July  27,  1866;  grad 
97 


98  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

1870;  Ensign,  July  12,  1871;  Master  Sep  15,  1873;  Lieut,  Dec  28,  1878. 
NATHANIEL  MEADE,  born  in  Linn  County,  Iowa;  appointed  from 
Cedar  Rapids,  Iowa,  Sep  n,  1877;  grad  1882;  assigned  to  cruiser  Yantic; 
resigned  June  1,  1884.  JOHN  FLAVEL,  born  in  Norwich,  Chenango 
County,  N.  Y.;  appointed  from  same  place  Sep  5,  1884;  grad  in  1888; 
Ensign,  July  1,  1890;  assigned  to  cruiser  Vesuvius. 

COLLEGE  GRADUATES. 

The  principal  Colleges  of  America  have  sent  the  appended  Graduate  List  of  HUBBARDS,  repre- 
senting the  honorary,  literary,  classical,  agricultural  and  medical  degrees  which  have  been  conferred. 
The  data  of  these  graduates  is  not  in  every  case  as  full  as  could  be  wished.  The  asterisks  denote  de- 
grees given  by  other  colleges,  and  the  figures  the  year  of  graduation.  Cornell  University  and  Welles- 
ley  College  have  had  no  Hubbard  Graduates. 

Brown  University,  R.  I. — Jacob,  1816;  William  Henry,  1845. 

Columbian  University,  Washington,  D.  C. — Gardiner  Greene,  LL.D, 
1888. 

Rutgers  College,  N.  J. — William  C,  Plainfield,  N.  J.,  special  course, 
1890. 

John  Hopkins  University,  Md. — Frank  Gaylord,  Md.;  Professor  of 
English  in  the  University  of  Wisconsin. 

Princeton  College,  N.  J. — Jonathan  B.,  1836,  minister,  died  in  1883; 
Joseph  D.,  1881,  lawyer,  Chicago,  111. 

Smith  College,  Mass. — Miss  Alice  J.,  1887,  Toronto,  Canada;  Miss 
Grace,  1887,  Northampton,  Mass. 

Oberlin  College,  Ohio — Miss  Almira,  1857  (now  Mrs.  Alexander  Swift, 
Cincinnati,  Ohio);  Lucius  Alanson,  Ohio,  1857. 

University  of  Pennsylvania — Medical  Graduates:  James  T.,  Va.,  1798; 
John,  Me.,  1822;  Hopson  M.,  Ga.,  1826;  Thomas,  Ohio,  1885. 

Williams  College,  Mass. — Robert,  1803;  John,  1809;  Elisha,  1811; 
Fordyce  Mitchell,  1828;  Josiah  Clark,  1877,  son  of  Eli  A.,  Hatfield, 
Mass.;  William  Norris,  M.  D.,  1883. 

Vassar  College,  N.  Y. — Miss  Emma  L.,  Hatfield,  Mass.;  Miss  Mary  T., 
Greenwich,  Ct;  Miss  Martha  (Mrs.  Skinner,  Holyoke,  Mass.). 

Boston  University,  Mass. — Henry  C,  Boston,  Mass.,  LLB.,  1873; 
Lucius  Lee,  Cambridge,  Mass.,  *AB.,  LLB.,  1875;  Dwight  Lauson, 
Boston,  Mass.,  SB.,  1889. 

Mount  Holyoke  College,  Mass. — Miss  Harriet  A.,  1848,  Boston,  Mass.; 
Miss  Lucy  M.,  1859,  died  in  Middletown,  Ct.,  in  1878;  Miss  Maria  L., 
185 1,  Concord,  Mass.,  married  Rev.  L.  C.  Ford,  in  1858,  of  Wellesley 
Hills  (deceased). 

Columbia  College,  N.  Y. — Bela  Hubbard,  STD.,  1762;  William  H., 
AB.,  1770,  chief  justice  court  common  pleas  and  judge  court  claims,  U. 
S.;    Fordyce    Mitchell,   STD.,    i860;    Joseph   Croofoot,  LLB.,   1S75; 


MILITARY,   NAVAL  AND   COLLEGE   GRADUATES.    gg 

Lester  Samuel,  Jr.,  LLB.,  1876;  William  Hustace,  AB.,  1880;  Samuel 
McK.,  LLB.,  1885;  William  Norris,  M.D.,  1S86. 

Wesleyan  University,  Ct. — Chester  Dorman,  AB.,  1840;  Eli,  N.  Y., 
born  in  181 8,  AB.,  1845,  removed  to  Somerville,  Ala.,  and  Macon,  Miss., 
married  Georgiana  Leach,  Durham,  Ct. — she  died  in  1852 — he  married 
again  in  i860,  and  died  December  22,  1868,  in  Louisville,  Miss.;  William 
Pallister,  AB.,  1863,  Wheeling,  W.  Va.;  Nelson  Chamberlain,  same 
place,  AB.,  1892. 

University  of  New  York — Medical  Graduates:  Henry,  1844,  died  April 
26,  1865,  aged  43,  at  Auburn,  Cal.;  George  C,  Jr.,  1859,  Tottehville,  S. 
I;  Stuart,  1861;  Chauncey  G.,  1S71,  Hornellsville,  N.  Y.  (see  "  Hulbard 
Hubbards");  Frank  Allen,  1878,  Taunton,  Mass.  (see  Abridged  De- 
scent Line.);  George  Elijah,  1883,  N.  Y.  City;  Leroy  Watkins,  *AM., 
1883,  New  York  City;  Howard  Fruin,  1887. 

Trinity  College,  Ct. — Isaac  George,  1839,  *DD.,  1859,  Episcopal 
clergyman,  Claremont,  N.  H.,  died  March  30,  1879;  William  Francis, 
1871,  Episcopal  clergyman,  1875,  chaplain  U.  55.  A.;  George  Milton, 
1875,  banker,  San  Francisco,  Cal.;  William  Stimpson,  1888,  son  of  Rev. 
I.  G.,  at  Sag  Island  Medical  College;  Elijah  Kent,  Jr.,  1892,  Middle- 
town,  Ct.;  Richard  Dudley,  honorary,  1851;  Fordyce  Mitchell,  hon- 
orary, i860. 

Bowdoin  College,  Me. — Samuel  Dana,  AB.,  1830,  born  September  4, 
1807,  Wicasset,  Me.,  merchant  and  banker,  died  January  26,  1883,  Mont- 
gomery, Ala.;  John  Barrett,  AB.,  1857,  son  of  Ex-Governor  John,  Me., 
born  February  4,  1837,  Hallowell,  Me.,  Captain  in  1st  Maine  Battery, 
died  May  27,  1863,  at  Port  Hudson,  La.;  Thomas  Hamlin,  AB.,  1857, 
lawyer,  N.  Y.  City;  William  Wing  ate,  AB.,  1890,  born  June  15,  1868, 
Bangor,  Me.;  Clinton  Perley,  M.  D.,  1884,  born  April  9,  1849,  Hiram, 
Me.,  physician,  Lovell,  Me. 

Dartmouth  College,  N.  H. — John,  academical  course,  1785;  Henry, 
ac,  1803;  Oliver,  M.  D.,  1811;  Jonathan  H.,  AM.,  1S13;  Oliver  Pay- 
son,  AM.,  1813;  John  W.,  ac,  1814;  John,  ac.  1816;  Benjamin  T.,  M. 
D.,  1825;  Denison  G.,  M.  D.,  1832;  Gardiner  G.,  ac,  1841;  John,  ac, 
1841;  Solon,  M.  D.,  1843;  Stephen  G.,  M.  D.,  1843;  Benjamin  P.,  M.  D., 
1852;  Grosvenor  S.,  ac,  1862;  Charles  L.,  ac,  1865;  George  F.,  M.  D., 
1865;  George  H.,  AM.,  1868;  William  F.,  Chandler  School,  1S69; 
Charles  A.,  agl,  1877;  Edwin  T.,  M.  D.,  1878;  George  H.,  Rev.  ac, 
1880;  Henry  A.,  ac,  1885. 

University  of  Virginia — (The  names  of  the  following  Hubbards  were 
all  spelled  with  one  "  b  "  except  two)  Edmund  Wilcox,  b  1806,  Thurs- 
ton, Buckingham  Co.,  Va.,  class  1825-6,  M.  C,  farmer  (dead);  Robert 
Thurston,  Jr.,  b  1808,  Buckingham  Co.,  Va.,  class  1828,  Mem.  Va.  Leg., 


IOO  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

farmer,  d  1874;  James  L.,  b  1835,  Buckingham  Co.,  Va.,  class  1853-4-6, 
Lt.  Col.,  C.  S.  A.,  lawyer  and  farmer,  Arrington,  Nelson  Co.,  Va. ;  Wil- 
liam Bolling,  b  1836,  Buckingham  Co.,  Va.,  class  1853-4-5-6,  farmer, 
Norwood,  Nelson  Co.,  Va.;  James  Robert,  Jr.,  b  1837,  Norfolk,  Va.,  class 
1856-7,  Episcopal  minister,  D.  D.,  Norfolk,  Va.;  Robert  Thurston,  Jr., 
b  1839,  Buckingham  Co.,  Va.,  class  i860,  Adjutant,  C.  S.  A.,  lawyer, 
faimer,  Mem.  Va.  Leg.,  Thurston,  Buckingham  Co.,  Va.;  Bolling,  b 
1847,  Buckingham  Co.,  Va.,  class  1865-6,  lawyer,  N.  Y.  City;  John 
Eppes,  b  1847,  Buckingham  Co.,  Va.,  class  1870,  M.  D.,  Univ.  of  Md., 
physician  (dead),  Thurston,  Buckingham  Co.,  Va.;  Julius  W.  Hubbard, 
b  1823,  Northampton,  Mass.,  class  1844;  Richard  Bennet  Hubbard,  b 
1832,  Walton  Co.,  Ga.,  class  185 1,  lawyer,  politician,  Texas;  Edmund 
Wilcox,  Jr.,  b  1853,  Thurston,  Buckingham  Co.,  Va.,  class  1875,  lawyer, 
Mem.  Va.  Leg.  Class  1889:  J.  Lighton  and  Tazewell  T.,  Norfolk,  Va. 
Class  1892-3:  James,  Paris,  Texas. 

Yale  University,  Ct. — David,  AB,  1721 ;  Joxathax,  1724,  Rev.;  Daniel, 
1727;  John,  hon'v,  1730;  John,  1744,  Rev.;  Leverett,  1744;  John,  1747, 
Rev;  Daniel,  1748;  Russell,  1751;  Bela,  1758,  Rev.;  Nathaniel,  1759; 
Moses,  hon'y,  1765;  Stephen  W,  1766;  Robert,  1769,  Rev.;  William, 
1785;  William  G,  1785;  Lucius,  1788;  Bela,  1792;  Henry,  1792;  Elijah, 
1795;  Ruggles,  1796;  Thomas  H,  1799;  Samuel,  1802;  George,  1803; 
Russell,  1806;  Richard,  1813;  Anson,  1817,  Rev.;  Thomas,  hon'y, 
1818;  Samuel  D,  1819;  William  J,  1820;  Thomas  G,  1822;  Austin  O, 
Rev.,  1824;  Jabez  B,  1825;  Oliver  P,  1828;  Denison  H,  MD,  1829;  John 
M,  1829;  Thomas  R,  1829;  George,  MD,  1835;  John  N,  1839,  Rev.; 
Richard  D,  1839;  William  F,  1839;  Chauncey  H,  1840,  Rev.;  Myron 
R,  MD,  1840;  George  B,  1842,  Rev.;  Joseph  S,  1843;  John  P,  1848,  Rev.: 
Thomas  S,  1849;  Robert,  MD,  1851;  David  G,  1852;  Van  Buren,  1855; 
James  M,  1859,  Rev.;  Charles  H,  MD,  i860;  Stephen  G,  hon'y,  i860; 
Charles  E,  1862;  Charles  H,  Ph  D,  1867;  Elbert  H,  1872;  Charles  L, 
1873;  Joseph  C,  1873;  Richard  W,  hon'y,  1874;  Frank  E,  1875;  John  T, 
1880;  George  H,  1881,  Rev.;  William  B,  1881,  Rev.;  Sherman  H,  LLB, 
1882;  Allen,  Ph  D,  1883;   Philip  P,   1885;  Frank  W,  1888.     Total— 67. 

Amherst  College,  Mass. — Rodolphus  Baker,  son  of  Giles  and  Rebecca 
(Hubbard)  Hubbard,  b  in  Sunderland,  Mass.,  Sep  3,  1803,  class  1829, 
AM,  1834,  AB,  1874,  Rev,  teacher,  editor,  member  governor's  council, 
board  education,  Mem.  Mass.  Leg.,  trustee  Williston  Seminary,  comm'r 
Franklin  Co.,  Mass.,  m  Apl  28,  1832,  Mary  Elizabeth,  dau  Ezra  Fitch, 
Guilford,  Vt.  (Rodolphus  was  drowned  in  San  Pablo  Creek,  near  San 
Francisco,  Gal.,  Sep  29,  1875);  George,  *MD,  class  1829,  b  in  Brimfield, 
Mass.,  Aug  18,  1808,  son  Simeon  and  Chloe  (Goodell)  Hubbard,  Boston, 
Mass.,  m  Mrs.  Mary  E.  McLellan,  dau  Moses  Warren,  Elliot,  Me.;  Ochus 


MILITARY,  NAVAL  AXD  COLLEGE  GRADUATES.    IOI 

Graves,  class  1829,  b  Jan  7,  1805,  Sunderland,  Mass.,  son  Elisha  and 
Achsah  (Graves)  Hubbard,  clergyman  at  East  Falmouth,  m  July  25, 
1833,  Martha,  dau  Jacob  Smith,  Hadley,  Mass.,  d  typhoid  fever  Aug  14, 
1S52,  East  Falmouth;  Franklin,  AM,  Sunderland,  Mass.,  1854,  b  July 
13,  1827,  at  Leverett,  Mass.,  son  Dickman  and  Elizabeth  Cooley  (Field) 
Hubbard,  school-teacher,  merchant,  m  Nov  29,  1869,  Sarah  R.,  dau 
Alonzo  Lyman,  South  Hadley,  Mass.,  Toledo,  Ohio;  Albert  Wells, 
class  1S67  (see  "  Hulbard  Hubbards ");  William  Henry,  class  1871, 
AM  (Louisville,  Ky.),  b  April  16,  1851,  in  Lexington,  K3-.,  son  William 
Henry  and  Anna  (Hines)  Hubbard,  Rev,  preached  at  Rutland,  West 
Amesbury,  Concord,  N.  H.,  and  Fall  River,  Mass.;  Leroy  W.,  class  1879, 
*MD,  1S83,  physician,  surgeon,  lecturer,  Bellevue  Hospital,  practicing 
X.  Y.  City;  Edward  Waite,  class  1885,  b  Jan  31,  1864,  Louisville,  Ky., 
son  William  H.  and  Anna  (Hines)  Hubbard,  editor  (People  and  Patriot), 
Concord,  N.  H.,  and  on  staff  Springfield  Republican,  Mass.,  d  typhoid 
fever  March  23,  1S87;  Louis  V,  class  1887,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

Harvard  University,  Mass. — (1636:  Oldest  College  in  United  States.) 
First  graduate— WILLIAM  HUBBARD  (eight  others  in  class),  MA, 
1642;  Richard  (bro  WILLIAM),  AB,  1653,  AM,  1655;  John,  AB,  1695, 
AM — d  1705;  Nathaniel,  AB,  1698,  AM — justice  sup  court,  prov  Mass, 
d  1748;  Thomas,  AB,  1721,  AM — Treasurer  H.  U.  21  years,  d  1773; 
Nathaniel,  AB,  1732,  AM — d  1772;  Leverett,  AB,  1742,  AM — justice 
sup  court,  prov  N.  H.,  d  1793;  Moses,  AB,  1765,  AM  (Yale),  1765,  d 
1S22;  Ebenezer,  AB,  1777,  AM,  1782,  d  1800;  Daniel,  AB,  1781,  d  1781; 
John,  AB,  1785,  d  1836;  Dudley,  AB,  1786,  AM,  1793,  d  1816;  Gilbert 
Harrison,  AB,  1790,  AM — member  Mass.  Hist.  Society — d  1S03;  Eben- 
ezer, AB,  1805,  d  1858;  George  Johonnot,  AB,  1821,  d  1822;  Lucius 
Virgil,  AB,  1824,  d  1849;  John,  AB,  1829,  AM — d  1848;  Henry  Bab- 
cock,  MD,  1834,  d  1870;  Henry,  AB,  1837,  AM— LLB,  1840,  d  1S76; 
Nathaniel  Dean,  AB,  1840,  d  1865;  Samuel,  LLD,  1842— LLD  (Yale), 
1827;  Joseph  Welton,  *  AB,  *  AM,  LLB,  1S52;  Richard  Bennet,  *AB, 
1S53;  Henry  Blatchford,  AB,  1854,  d  1862;  Charles  Thacher,  MD, 
1861;  William  Guptill,  AB,  1863,  d  1865;  Lewis  Kelley,  LLB,  1871,  d 
1872;  Lucius  Lee,  AB,  1872,  *  LLB,  1875;  Frank  Allen,  AB,  1873, 
*MD,  1878;  Henry  Guernsey,  AB,  1873;  Charles  Wells,  AB,  187S; 
William  Hammond,  AB,  1879;  Harry  Mascerine,  AB,  1882;  Charles 
Joseph,  AB,  1883,  LLB,  1886;  Rufus  Peabody,  MD,  1883;  Harry,  AB, 
1884;  Gorham,  AB,  1887.     Total— 37. 

The  following  are  "  HOBART  "  Graduates:  Joshua,  AB,  1650,  AM— 
d  1 7 1 7 ;  Jeremiah,  AB,  1650,  AM — d  1715;  Gershom,  AB,  1667,  AM — d 
1707;  Japhet,  AB,  1667;  Nehemiah,  AB,  1667,  AM — Fellow,  d  1712; 
Nehemiah,  AB,  1714,  AM — d  1740;  Noah,  AB,  1724,  AM,  1729,  d  1773; 
Joseph  Snow  Hubbart,  AB,  1822,  AM,  1827,  d  1874. 


OF" 
KITTERY,     MAINE. 

Two  hundred  years  !   Two  hundred  years  !    What  changes  have  they  seen. 
Since  the  red  hunter  chased  the  deer  o  er  copse  and  village  green. 

—Lydia  Hunt  Sigourney. 


PHILIP  HUBBARD  came  from  the  Parish  of  St.  Saviour  in  the 
Isle  of  Jersey,  one  of  the  Channel  Islands  situate  in  a  very  deep 
indentation  at  the  mouth  of  the  English  Channel  and  close  to  the  French 
coast.  The  language  spoken  there  is  Norman-French,  though  it  has  been 
an  English  possession  since  William*  the  Conqueror,  Duke  of  Nor- 
mandy, defeated  Harold  the  Saxon  at  Hastings  and  ascended  the 
English  throne  in  1066.  St.  Saviour  is  one  of  the  twelve  parishes  of 
Jersey,  its  western  boundary  line  running  close  to  the  Capital  of  the 
Island,  St.  Helier,  an  ancient  town  whose  foundations  were  laid  in  the 
dusky  ages  of  Gallic  barbarism  during  the  sixth  century. 

PHILIP  HUBBARD  probably  sailed  from  the  bay  of  St.  Aubin  with 
his  brother  Joseph,  who  died  in  Maine  April  1,  1701.  Joseph's  will  is  as 
follows : 

In  the  name  of  God,  Amen  !  I,  JOSEPH  HUBART,  of  the  Parish  of  St.  Sover,  on  the  Island  of 
Jearsey,  but  now  in  New  England,  *  *  *  will  and  bequeath  to  my  Loving  Brother  Phillip  Hubart 
of  Kittery,  in  the  county  of  Yorke  in  New  England,  with  whom  I  have  lived,  and  by  whom  I  have 
bin  Provided  for  and  Maintained  ever  since  my  Coming  to  New  England;  All  my  Estate,  Real  and 
Personal.  That  doth  belong  to  me,  even  my  whole  Title  &  Interest  to  any  Estate  or  part  of  an  Estate 
in  any  wise  pertaining  to  me  in  any  part  of  the  World,  and  Particularly  a  Tract  of  Land  or  a  Field 
Scituate  in  the  Parish  of  St.  Sover  in  Jearsey,  lately  in  the  Possession  of  my  Brother  John  Hubart  of 
Sd  Parish,  to  him,  his  Heirs,  or  assigns  forever.  *  *  *  I  set  my  hand  and  Seal  Mch  24,  1701. 
JOSEPH  HUBART.  [seal]  Witnesses:  Daniel  Stone,  Jonathan  Stone,  John  Wade.  Recorded  Apl 
21,  1701.    Inventory  returned  June  16,  1701,  at  £3.  00.  10. 

The  time  of  arrival  of  these  two  brothers  in  New  England  is  unknown, 
though  in  a  written  instrument  it  is  stated  that  PHILIP  was  "  sometime 

*  William  (b  1024  in  Falaise,  Normandy,  France)  had  Danish  blood  in  his  veins,  being  sixth  in  de- 
scent from  Rollo  the  Dane,  who  conquered  and  settled  Normandy  with  his  followers  about  885.  He 
was  named  after  Rollo's  son,  William  Longsword.  His  mother  was  Harlette,  or  Harleve,  dau  of  Ful- 
bert,  a  tanner  of  Falaise,  and  his  father  was  Robert,  Duke  of  Normandy,  who  barefooted  and  bare- 
headed made  a  pilgrimage  to  Jerusalem  to  expiate  his  sins. 
102 


PHILIP  HUBBARD,    OF  KITTERY,  ME.  I03 

of  ye  Island  of  Jersey."  Probably  they  were  unmarried  upon  their 
arrival,  as  no  mention  is  made  by  Joseph  of  wife  or  children.  The 
records  of  Kittery  and  Berwick  furnish  the  following-  scraps  of  mis- 
cellaneous information  about  PHILIP  HUBBARD: 

July  5,  1698,  PHILIP  HUBBARD  was  fined  20  shillings  (afterwards 
remitted)  by  the  court  of  Sessions  of  the  County  of  York  for  delinquency 
in  not  appearing  as  a  grand  juryman.  March  30,  1702,  he  was  chosen 
constable.  Feb.  2,  1702-3,  he  is  mentioned  as  selectman  of  the  Parish 
of  Berwick,  and  presented  a  bill  at  the  next  meeting  of  15  shillings 
"  for  work  upon  the  meeting-house."  Berwick  was  set  off  from  Kittery 
and  incorporated  as  a  parish  in  1701  or  1702,  and  as  a  town  in  17 13.  At 
a  meeting  of  selectmen  Jan.  5,  1707,  at  Berwick,  it  was  ordered  that 
^145  and  15  shillings  be  paid  towards  the  building  of  the  meeting-house 
to  "  Philip  Hobood,"  treasurer  of  the  parish — "  Daniel  Emery,  clerk."  At 
a  legal  town  meeting  held  at  Berwick,  Aug.  5,  17 13,  he  was  again  elected 
selectman  and  town  treasurer  for  the  year  ensuing,  also  surveyor  of 
highways.  Shortly  after  this  he  died,  as  the  town  meeting  of  March  15, 
1713-14,  elected  John  Hooper  his  successor.  "Voted — the  present 
treasurer,  John  Hooper,  is  empowered  to  account  with  the  administra- 
tors of  Mr.  Philip  Hubbard,  the  late  treasurer,  deceased,"  etc.  He  was, 
judging  from  the  offices  he  held,  one  of  the  foremost  citizens  of  Kittery 
and  Berwick.  Dec.  22,  1692,  he  married  Mrs.  Elizabeth  (Goodwin) 
Emery,*  daughter  of  Daniel  and  Margaret  (Spencer)  Goodwin  (inn- 
keeper at  Berwick),  and  widow  of  Zecheriah  Emery  who  died  prior  to 
Dec.  22,  1692,  and  who  m  her  Dec.  9,  1686,  and  by  whom  she  had  Eliza- 
beth (b  Nov.  24,  1687)  and  Zechariah  Emery  (b  Oct.  5,  1690).  In  17 16 
his  widow  Elizabeth  (Goodwin-Emery)  Hubbard  and  his  son  Philip  of 
York,  "mariner,"  unite  in  the  sale  of  his  property  as  administrators. 
He  had  seven  children,  all  born  in  Kittery. 

The  first  land  or  "homestead  lot "  PHILIP  HUBBARD  bought  was 
from  James  Emery,  Sr.,  of  "  Barwick,  Mass,"  to  whom  it  was  "  laid  out  " 
Nov  1,  1654,  by  the  "  lot  layers  of  Kittery."  He  and  his  wife  Elizabeth 
for  a  consideration  of  ^120  quitclaimed  it  to  PHILIP  HUBBARD  Jan 
27,  1696-7.     It  comprised — 

"  All  that  my  Land  and  building  Scituate,  lying  and  being  in  Barwick 
aforesd,  Containing  forty  Acres,  be  it  more  or  less,  butted  and  bounded 
as  followeth,  vidzt:  beginning  at  a  Red  oak  tree  Standing  in  the  fence 
between  my  sd  Land  and  Mr.  John  Playsteds,  or  birchen  point,  Lot  Soe 


*  Daniel  Stone  married  Patience  Goodwin  (Elizabeth's  sister)  and.had  seven  children.  Their  grand- 
father was  Thomas  Spencer  who  settled  early  in  the  Indian  village  of  Newiekawannock,  near 
Mewickawannock  Falls,  where  in  1633  or  1624  the  first  sawmill  in  New  England  was  erected.  Thomas 
Spencer  had  a  wife  Patience, 


104  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

called,  and  Soe  to  the  Main  River  Side,  and  up  the  sd  River  Northward 
to  a  small  brook  and  valley,  which  is  a  parting  bounds  between  sd  Land 
and  Daniel  Stone's  Land;  and  from  thence,  running  as  the  fence  now 
Stands,  to  a  tall  white  oak  stump  Standing  within  Daniel  Stone's  garri- 
son; and  from  sd  Stump  upon  a  Streight  Course  to  ye  first  mentioned 
red  oak  tree,  where  it  began,  together  with  all  my  Right,  title  and  inter- 
est of  and  to  the  Marsh,  Comonly  Called  the  fowling  Marsh  Joyning 
to  sd  Land." 

April  25,  1703,  he  bought  for  £70  an  additional  forty  acres  from  Be- 
noni  Hodgson  of  Kittery;  May  17,  1706,  a  50-acre  tract  for  £30  from 
William  Goodwin  of  Kittery,  formerly  granted  to  James  Barry  by  the 
town  of  Kittery  June  24,  1673;  Jan  2,  1706,  50  acres  for  £36  from  Dan- 
iel Mackentire,  granted  Feb  9,  1663,  by  the  town  to  Micham  Macken- 
tire;  Dec  19,  1709,  40  acres  for  £8.  \os.  from  Ephraim  Joy,  house wright, 
and  wife  Sarah  Joy;  and  Jan  11,  1709-10,  50  acres  that  was  laid  out  May 
10,  1703,  to  Alexander  Grant  and  James  Grant. 

The  inventory  of  his  estate,  sworn  to  Feb  22,  17 13-14,  amounted  to 
£1223.01.  Some  of  the  items  mentioned  are:  4  oxen,  with  hay  to  win- 
ter them,  £26;  9  cows  at  £4  p,  with  hay  to  winter  them;  3-yr  old  hefer 
£3;  5  2-yr  old  cattle  £10;  2  3-yr  old  steeres,  with  hay  to  winter  them 
£7;  a  bull  £3;  6  yearlings  £7.  10^;  a  calfe  6s;  a  negro  woman  £35  ;  2 
mares  &  a  horse  £6  p;  29  sheep  at  7^.  £10.  3s;  2  sowes  and  8  piggs  50^; 
2  shoats  jos;  carpenters  and  joyners  tools,  lathe,  etc.  £3.  2s;  1  cyder  mill 
&  press  £4,  and  many  other  items  of  personal  property.  His  widow  died 
before  Dec  16,  1736,  when  her  thirds  were  divided  and  Philip  the  eldest 
son  received  £80  and  the  rest  of  the  children  £40  apiece,  being  John, 
Moses,  Aaron,  Elizabeth  Redington,  Patience  Farnam,  and  Mary  Bean. 
The  inventory  of  his  real  estate  at  this  date  was  as  follows:  "  The  Home- 
stead with  ye  Buildings  thereon  £1000;  The  8  acres  yt  was  Moses  Hub- 
bard's £120;  The  2  acres  to  Aaron  £30;  To  60  acres  at  Salmon  falls 
£360;  The  40  acres  at  Lovey  Brook  £60;  The  100  acres  at  nine  notches 
£125."  Children— D1  Philip  (see  elsewhere),  John  (b  Aug  25,  1696, 
called  "husbandman,"  of  Berwick,  Aug  14,  1695,  afterward  removed  to 
Dover  and  engaged  in  grist-mill  business,  supposed  to  have  died  un- 
married, as  no  record  of  his  wife  or  children  could  be  found;  he  was 
alive  in  1739),  Elizabeth  (b  Feb  13,  1697,  alive  in  1742,  m  Nov  12,  1719, 
Jacob  Redington— b  Sep  5,  1695— of  Topsfield,  cooper,  son  of  Sergt. 
Daniel  and  Elizabeth  Redington.  Elizabeth  (Hubbard)  Redington  was 
adm  May  3,  1730,  into  full  communion  with  Church  of  Christ  of  Tops- 
field,  and  dismissed  (at  her  desire)  April  8,  1742,  "  to  ye  Christian  watch 
and  Holy  Communion  of  ye  Fourth  Church  of  Christ  in  Winsor;"  they 
had,  b  in  Topsfield   (cJitld—  name  unknown),  Dorcas,  bap  Aug  9,  1724,  d 


JOSHUA    ROBERTS    HUBBARD 
of  South   Berwick,   Me. 

(Descended  from  Philip  Hubbard  of  Kittery,  Me.) 


DR.   JOSEPH    HUBBARD 
of  Boston,  Mass. 

(Descended  from  Philip  Hubbard  of  Kittery,  Me.) 


I  06 


PHILIP  HUBBARD,    OF  KITTERY,   ME.  107 

in  Topsfield  Dec  1,  1729;  Daniel,  bap  Feb  26,  1726-7;  Jacob,  bap  May 
25,  1729;  Dorcas,  bap  June  n,  1732;  Phebe,  bap  Dec  28,  1735;  and 
Eliphalet,  bap  June  11,  1738),  E1  Moses  (see  elsewhere),  Aaron  (b  May 
4,  1702,  Mr.  Nathan  Bartlett,  tanner,  appointed  his  guardian  Dec  10, 
1716,  d  in  Topsfield  Sep  7,  175 1,  rem  to  Chelmsford,  Mass,  thence  to 
Topsfield,  where  he  m  June  1,  1733,  Mary  (Curtis)  How — din  Topsfield, 
very  suddenly  May  13,  1772 — dau  of  John  and  Priscilla  Curtis  and  widow 
of  Isaac  How  of  Falmouth,  whom  she  m  Jan  14,  1 730-1,  and  who  d  of 
small-pox  in  Topsfield  Nov  12,  1731;  Aaron  was  a  tanner  and  inherited 
his  father's  tanyard;  he  and  wife  owned  the  covenant  Aug  15,  1736;  Jan 
23,  1739-40,  "Aaron  Hubbard  and  Mary,  his  wife,  both  of  Topsfield, 
Mass,  were  administrators  to  the  estate  of  Isaac  Howe,  late  of  Falmouth, 
York  County,  Me,  father  of  Mary  (Howe-Curtis)  Hubbard;  they  had 
Mary,  b  July  9,  1734,  m  Aug  27,  1753,  William  Hood  of  Topsfield;  Lydia, 
bap  May  14,  1738,  d  Aug  12,  1738,  at  Topsfield;  Elnathan,  b  June  12, 
1740,  m  June  30,  1763  (1)  Mary  Redington — d  Mch  21,  1773,  of  Topsfield, 

and  had  Mehitable,  bap  Nov  7,  1773;  he  then  m  (2)  Mary ,  b 

1748,  d  at  Topsfield  Feb  16,  1799,  and  had  William,  b  Aug  16,  1779,  called 
"  Lieut,"  who  m  Oct  11,  1804,  Rebecca  Gould — b  Nov  28,  1780,  d  Mch 
15,  1818 — eldest  dau  Zacheus  and  Anna  Gould  and  had  William  Reding- 
ton b  Jan  7,  1805,  Humphrey  Gould  b  May  23,  1807,  m  July  1,  1830  (1) 
Eliza  Averell — b  at  Beverly  Feb  25,  1807,  d  Nov  8,  183 1 — and  Feb  10, 
1833  (2)  Irene  Averell,  b  Aug  23,  1804,  daus  of  Azariah  and  Sarah 
Averell  of  Topsfield;  Benjamin  Franklin  b  Sep  22,  1809,  George  Wash- 
ington b  June  11,  1812,  and  John  Brown  b  Jan  12,  1815,  d  Dec  10,  1816; 
and  John,  b  Sep  24  and  bap  Oct  2,  1743),  Patience  (b  Mch  30,  1704,  d  at 
Georgetown,  Me,  in  175 1,  as  an  inventory  of  her  estate  was  made  Jan 
11,  1752,  m  Feb  9,  1723,  at  Berwick,  "  Ensign"  William  Card — b  Feb  4, 
1696,  farmer,  d  Mch  12,  1 730-1— son  of  Thomas  and  Mary  (Winchester) 
Card  of  York,  and  had  Mary,  b  June  25,  1724;  Joseph,  b  Dec  27,  1726,  m 
Hannah  Simpson;  Betty,  b  Apl  3,  1729,  m  Johnson  Young;  and  Hep- 
zibah,  posthumous,  b  April  20,  1731.  Widow  Patience  (Hubbard)  Card 
then  m  Aug  21,  1733,  widower  Daniel  Farnham  of  York,  "yeoman" 
(who  had  by  his  first  wife,  Hannah,  Zebediah,  Joshua  and  Daniel  Farn- 
ham), and  lived  at  Negwassett,  York),  and  Mary  (b  Jan  25,  1705,  d  1744, 
m  Nov  18,  1726,  John  Bean  of  York— b  July  18,  1700,  d  May  17,  174°— 
son  of  Capt.  Lewis  and  Mary  (Austin-Seywood)  Bean  of  York,  and  had 
John,  b  Mch  15,  1726-7,  d  1748  unm;  Elizabeth,  b  Apl  6,  1729,  m  Jan  17, 
1746,  Simon  Emery  of  Berwick,  son  of  Simon  and  Martha  (Lord)  Emery; 
Joseph,  b  Apl  1,  1731,  d  y;  Mary,  b  Apl  1,  1733,  m  Feb  28,  1752,  James 
Hubbard  of  Wells,  son  of  Moses  and  Abigail  (Heard)  Hubbard;  Hul- 
dah,  b  July  24,  1735,  d  1S05,  m  1753  Zecheriah  Emery,  son  of  Zecheriah 


I08  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GEXEALOGY. 

and  Ann  (Hodgdon)  Emery;  and  Jeremiah,  b  1737,  d  abt  1757  unm. 
Widow  Mary  (Hubbard)  Bean  then  m  Oct  18,  1744,  John  Sedgley  of 
York,  and  d  before  Apl,  1746. 

SONS  OF  PHILIP  AND  ELIZABETH   (GOODWIN-EMERY)   HUBBARD. 

Q1  PHILIP — b  in  Kittery,  Nov  9,  1693,  d  between  Mch  18, 1722-3,  and 
Nov  21,  1723,  m  about  1717  Elizabeth  Roberts  (b  Mch  13,  1697),  dau 
Joseph  and  Elizabeth  Roberts,  of  Dover,  N.  H.,  who  was  received  into 
First  Cong.  Church  at  Berwick  Apl  2,  1727.  Widow  Elizabeth  (Roberts) 
Hubbard  afterward  rem  to  Dover,  N.  H.,  where  she  is  mentioned  July 
14,  1727,  as  a  "  shopkeeper."  She  m  there  abt  1727  or  1728  Capt  John 
Gage,  who  d  there  in  1783,  and  who  had  by  her,  sons  William,  John, 
Moses  and  Jonathan  Gage.  The  history  of  Wells  and  Kennebunk 
states  that  Sep  16,  17 12,  Elisha  Plaisted  and  Hannah  Wheelwright,  dau 
of  Rev.  John  Wheelwright,  were  married  at  Wells,  numerous  guests 
from  adjacent  towns  being  present.  After  the  nuptials  were  concluded 
the  garrison  was  attacked  by  Indians,  and  among  the  brave  defenders 
were  "Captains  Robinson  and  John  Heard,*  PHILIP  HUBBARD, 
and  others."  Captain  Robinson  was  killed,  and  the  bridegroom  captured, 
though  afterward  redeemed  by  ransom.  At  a  town  meeting  held  Mch 
14,  1717-18,  PHILIP  HUBBARD  was  elected  "field  driver  for  the 
year  ensuing,"  and  May  7,  17 18,  "grand  juryman  for  court  of  assize 
and  general  goal  delivery"  and  Mch  9,  17 18-9,  "surveyor  of  highways," 
and  Oct  17,  17 21,  "trustee  for  letting  out  upon  interest  ^240  .15^.",  and 
Sep  20,  1722,  "moderator."  He  was  occasionally  mentioned  as  a  "ma- 
riner "  in  legal  documents,  but  having  inherited  by  allotment  the  larger 
part  of  his  father's  homestead  and  added  to  it  several  new  land  pur- 
chases, upon  which  he  kept  considerable  live  stock,  it  is  quite  likely  that 
farming  was  his  chief  occupation.  He  owned,  though,  one-half  of  a 
small  fishing  boat  with  his  brother  John,  "  valued  at  £9."  At  that  period 
the  Newichawannock  and  Piscataqua  Rivers  were  famous  salmon  sta- 
tions, and  doubtless  their  fishing  boat  was  employed  principally  in 
catching  salmon.  There  are  pretty  good  grounds  for  believing  that 
PHILIP  was  killed  suddenly  by  Indians  in  May  of  1723.  Children — 
D2  Philip  (see  elsewhere),  Q3  Joseph  (see  elsewhere),  and  Elizabeth  (b 
posthumous,  bap  Nov  21,  1723,"  m  Timothy  Weymouth,  of  Kittery). 

E1  MOSES— b  in  Kittery  July  8,  1700,  d  in  Kittery  1757  or  1784,  m 
Dec  26,  1723,  Abigail  Heard  (b  Apl  15,  1702,  d  about  1768),  youngest 
dau  of  Capt.  John*  and  Jane  (Cole-Littlefield)   Heard.     Dec   10,  1716, 


*  Capt,  John  Heard  lived  on  Sturgeon  Creek.  He  taught  awhile  the  school  at  Alewive  Me, 
and  was  known  locally  as  a  lusty  Indian  fighter,  his  first  wife  Phebe  (by  whom  he  had  Dorcas,  Phebe, 
Shuah  and  James)  having  been  killed  by  Indians  July  4,  1C97.  He  then  married  in  July,  lt>98,  widow 
Jane  (Cole)  Littlefield,  dau  of  Nicholas  Cole  and  relict  of  Joseph  Littlefield,  and  had  Jane,  Mary  and 
Abigail.    His  will  was  probated  Jan  6,  1753,  the  inventory  amounting  to  £674.  lis. 


PHILIP  HUBBARD,    OF  KITTERY,  ME.  109 

his  brother  Philip  was  appointed  his  guardian,  and  John  Heard  and 
Nathan  Bartlett  sureties  to  the  bond  of  ^200,  MOSES  being  in  his 
"  noonage,  and  disenabled  to  act  on  his  part  and  proportion  of  his 
father's  estate."  MOSES  HUBBARD  later  became  a  "  joyner,"  and  was 
elected  July  2,  1724,  "juryman  for  ye  next  Inferior  Court  to  be  held  at 
York/'  and  Feb  20,  1724-5,  "  constable  for  the  year  ensuing  and  refuses 
to  serve,"  and  Mch  12,  1732-3,  "grand  juryman,"  also  Mch  iS,  1733-4, 
"  grand  juryman  for  trials  for  next  Superior  Court,  to  be  holden  at 
York."  June  2,  1728,  he  "and  Abigail,  his  wife,  owned  the  covenant, 
and  their  children,  Tohn  Heard  and  Jane  [were]  baptized."  Aug  8, 
1736,  "Abigail,  wife  of  MOSES  HUBBARD,  received  into  the  Chh." 
He  resided  in  South  Berwick  until  1737.  and  then  removed  to  Kittery, 
now  Eliot,  and  settled  upon  "  Heard's  Tract,"  of  five  or  six  hundred 
acres.  His  estate  was  insolvent.  Children— E~  John  Heard  (see  else- 
where), Jane*  (b  in  Berwick  in  Jan  23.  1726,  m  June  22,  1749,  Hugh 
Tucker,  Jr,  of  Kittery),  E3  James  (see  elsewhere),  Warwick  (b  Aug  31, 

1 73 1,  d  y),  Mary  (b  Aug  3,   1734,  m    Davis),   E4  Warwick  (see 

elsewhere),  E5  Joseph  (see  elsewhere),  and  Joshua  (b  abt  1744,  called 
"yeoman,"' and  Sep  19,  1792,  "esquire,"  large  land-owner,  d  in  Kittery 
Apl  21,  1S07,  inventory  $3,480.61,  one-half  left  to  nephew  Joshua,  the 
other  half  to  widow  Dorcas,  which  became  Joshua's  upon  her  death,  m 
June  7,  1770,  Dorcas  Shapleigh  (b  1746,  d  Nov  2,  1S1S),  of  Kittery,  dau 
Nicholas  Shapleigh,  and  had  Abigail  Heard,  b  Oct  20,  1770,  d  Dec  19, 
1805,  wife  of  Dr.  Benjamin  Chickering,  no  children. 

SOXS  OF  PHILIP  AXD  ELIZABETH  (ROBERTS)   HUBBARD. 

0"  PHILIP— b  1718,  bap  at  Berwick  Apl  24,  1720,  d  Aug  8,  1792,  m 
abt  1740  Hannah  (Plummer?)  and  had  fourteen  children,  all  bap  at  Ber- 
wick except  two  youngest.  From  Mch  13,  1748-9,  to  ^cn  Ir>  1782,  he 
held  positions  in  Berwick  of,  respectively,  field  driver,  grand  juryman, 
fence  viewer,  surveyor  of  highways,  surveyor  of  lumber,  selectman, 
constable,  petit  juryman,  moderator  at  town  meetings,  committeeman  to 
"draw  up  some  instructions  for  the  Representatives,"  and  also  commit- 
teeman "  to  state  the  prices  of  produce  which  may  be  paid  in  towards 
the  pavment  of  said  soldiers,"  etc  (May  22,  1780).  He  owned  much  real 
estate  in  both  Berwick  f  and  Shapleigh,  buying  constantly  and  seldom 

*  A  partial  record  of  marriages  was  kept  in  Berwick  from  1713  to  1726;  after  this  none  were  kept 

UXlt  +  ••Berwick  originally  formed  a  part  of  the  patent  to  Capt.  John  Mason  and  Sir  Fernando  Gorges. 
It  wis  called  by  the  Indians  'Xewichawannock.'  Settlements  were  supposed  to  have  been  made 
there  as  early  as  1624,  as  mention  is  made  of  the  settlement  of  Xewichawannock  being  seven  years 
old  in  1631  Ambrose  Gibbons  and  Humphrey  Chadbourne  lived  at  Xewichawannock  in  1631.  In 
1634Mason  and  Gorges  divided  their  possessions  and  the  territory  east  of  the  Piscataqua  was  assigned 
to  Gorges  while  Mason  took  New  Hampshire.    Another  name  for  the  place  was  'Piscataqua,  so 


IIO  HUBBARD  BUS  TORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

selling  any.  He  gave  to  his  sons  Aaron,  Richard  and  Jonathan  some 
300  acres  in  Shapleigh,  where  they  settled  in  the  westerly  part  of  the 
town,  and  to  his  daughters  Elizabeth  Neal,  Hannah  Hodgdon,  Abigail 
Goodwin,  and  Sarah  Goodwin  he  left  "  each  a  feather-bed."  To  John 
and  Ichabod  he  bequeathed  the  homestead  and  buildings,  and  to  sons 
Moses  and  Stephen  "  if  the  said  Moses  and  Stephen  are  now  living  and 
return  home  to  Berwick  all  my  interest  in  the  3d  Division  in  Shapleigh, 
and  if  they  do  not  return,  then  to  go  to  John  and  Ichabod."  His  estate 
at  death  was  valued  at  ,£1,031.  iS.  8.  From  Mch  17,  1766,  he  was  called 
"Captain,"  and  led  a  company  in  Rev.  War  in  Col.  James  Scammon's 
regiment.  A  copy  of  his  commission  from  Congress,  signed  by  "John 
Hancock,  President,"  and  attested  by  "Charles  Thompson,  Secy,"  is  in 
existence.  Children — Benjamin  (bap  Nov  8,  1747,  m  Oct  22,  1771,  Abi- 
gail Hearl  and  rem  to  Shapleigh),  Elizabeth  (bap  Nov  8,  1747,  m  Nov 
29>  1 765,  John  Neal,  of  Kittery,  b  Aug  17,  1741,  son  of  John  and  Pa- 
tience (Johnson)  Neal,  who  lived  in  Hampton,  N.  H.),  John  (bap  Nov  8, 
1747,  d  at  Berwick  in  Aug  1793  or  '94,  m  Apl  1,  1777,  at  Berwick,  Sarah 
Nason,  and  had  Moses,  b  at  Berwick  abt  1781,  m  Mch  1,  18 10,  (1)  Sally 
Hobbs,  dau  Nathaniel  and  Patience  (Nowell)  Hobbs,  of  Berwick,  m  (2) 
Almira  Hayes,  of  South  Berwick  and  had  John,  lawyer,  South  Berwick, 
who  m  and  had  several  children;  Nathaniel,  lawyer,  Winterport,  Me; 
Sarah,  d  in  Jan,  1881,  had  husbands  Atwood  and  Brooks;  William  P., 
flour  merchant,  of  Bangor,  Me;  Emily  H.,  m  Sanborn,  of  Ports- 
mouth, N.  H.;  Almira  H.,  m  a  Mr.  Viles;  and  another  dau  who  m  a 
farmer,  John  A.  Dennett,  of  South  Berwick,  and  had  12  children;  Mary 
or  "Polly"  b  Mch  30,  1779,  d  at  South  Berwick  Apl  24,  1814,  at  child- 
birth, m  at  Berwick  Mch  19,  1800,  Joseph  Emery,  b  Feb  15,  1775,  farmer, 
d  Oct  16,  1845,  son  of  Job  and  Mary  (Hubbard)  Emery,  of  Berwick  ; 
after  "Polly's"  death  he  m  July  4,  1816,  (2)  Matilda  Nason — d  Mch  12, 
1818 — and  Nov 3,  1822,  (3)  Sarah  (Hodgdon)  Hubbard,  widow  of  Ichabod 
Hubbard,  and  had  by  first  wife:  Sarah,  b  July  3,  1S00,  d  Nov  7,  1806; 
Molly,  b  Apl  21,  1802,  d  Jan  24,  1S10;  John,  b  Apl  17,  1804,  m  Apl  21, 
1837,  Betsey  Simpson,  dau  Theophilus  and  Abigail  (Goodwin)  Simpson; 
Joseph,  b  Apl  12,  1806,  d  Feb  6,  1816;  Job,  b  Mch  20,  1808,  m  July  25, 
1839,  Abigail  Simpson,  Betsey's  sister;  Sarah,  b  Feb  26,  18 10;  Mary,  b 
Oct  4,  181 2;  and  infant,  b  and  d  Apl  23,  1814;  Philip  and  Lois,  no  records 

called  from  the  river  of  that  name,  although  the  term  was  usually  applied  to  the  region  farther  down 
and  near  the  mouth  of  that  river.  What  is  now  Berwick,  North  Berwick,  South  Berwick,  Eliot  and 
Kittery  was  incorporated  under  the  name  of  Kittery  late  in  1G00.  In  1713  the  northerly  portion  of 
Kittery  was  incorporated  under  the  name  of  Berwick.  In  1814  the  southerly  part  of  Berwick  was  in- 
corporated as  South  Berwick,  and  in  1831  Berwick  was  again  divided  and  the  northwestern  part  in- 
corporated as  North  Berwick.  In  1810  Kittery  was  again  divided  and  the  town  of  Eliot  taken  from 
its  northerly  half."—  William  F.  Lord. 


PHILIP  HUBBARD,   OF  KITTERY,  ME.  m 

of),  Hannah  (bap  Jan  i,  1748-9,  m  John  Hodgdon),  Abigail  (bap  Mch 
T7,  ^S0-1,  d  at  vSouth  Berwick  Oct  25,  1828,  m  Oct  22,  1771,  Ebenezer 
Goodwin,  of  Berwick,  b  1745,  d  at  South  Berwick  Oct  20,  1802),  Moses 
(bap  June  10,  1753,  unm,  lost  at  sea  in  a  privateer  during  Rev.  War), 
Aaron   (bap  June  10,   1753,  m  July  16,   1779,  Martha   Nason,   rem  to 

Shapleigh*  1781,  d  there  Mch  1,  1814,  had  second  wife  Dorcas  ; 

first  clerk  of  Cong.  Church,  afterward  joined  Baptist  Church  and  elected 
deacon,  moderator,  and  selectman  six  years — nine  children,  James, 
Aaron  (representative  in  1827  and  1828),  Hcpzibah,  who  m Mer- 
rill, Keziah,  who  m Cook,  Hannah,  Patty,  Dorcas,  and  two  others 

names  unknown),  Sarah  (bap  Feb  15,  1756,  m  Mch  21,  1787,  Aaron 
Goodwin,  both  of  Berwick),  Richard  (bap  May  11,  1760,  rem  to  Shap- 
leigh), Jonathan  (bap  June  27,  1762,  m  Mch  17,  1791,  Frances  Parsons 
and  rem  to  Shapleigh),  Eben  (bap  June  9,  1765,  d  y),  Q4  Ichabod  (see 
elsewhere),  and  Stephen  (b  abt  1770,  went  to  sea  with  his  brother  Moses 
and  never  returned). 

Q3  JOSEPH — bap  in  Berwick  June  11,  1721,  d  after  Mch  10,  1794,  m 
abt  1746  Sarah  Emery,  of  Kittery,  dau  of  Elder  Daniel  and  Mary 
(Hodgdon)  Emery,  and  was  adm  to  church  Mch  11,  1749-50,  and  had 
eleven  children,  all  bap  at  Berwick.  He  was  called  "  yeoman,"  and 
Mch  13,  1748-9,  was  elected  constable  of  Berwick;  Mch  22,  1756-7,  field 
driver  and  fence  viewer;  Mch  16,  1761,  juryman;  Mch  14,  1768,  culler 
of  staves  and  shingles;  and  Mch  10,  1794,  constable  and  collector.  Chil- 
dren— Mary  or  "  Polly  "  (b  Jan  12,  1745,  d  at  South  Berwick  Feb  24, 
1812,  m  in  1770  Job  Emery — b  1743  or  44,  d  at  South  Berwick  May  17, 
1828 — son  of  Joseph  and  Mehitable  (Stacy)  Emery,  and  had  Ichabod,  b 
Apl  21,  1771,  m  June  8,  1794,  Lois  Stacy,  of  North  Berwick,  and  had  ten 
children;  Polly,  b  Jan  7,  1773,  d  Mch  27,  1821,  m  July  19,  1792,  Major 
Nathan  Nason,  and  had  thirteen  children;  and  Joseph,  b  Feb  15,  1775,  d 
Oct  16,  1845,  m  (1)  Polly  Hubbard — d  Apl  24,  1814,  with  infant  child — 
dau  John  and  Sarah  (Nason)  Hubbard,  (2)  Matilda  Nason,  and  Nov  3, 
1822,  (3)  Sarah  (Hodgdon)  Hubbard,  and  had  by  Polly  Hubbard  eight 
children — see  preceding),  James  (bap  Nov  8,  1747,  in  Sep  13,  1774,  Abi- 
gail Jenness),  Q5  Joseph  (see  elsewhere),  Samuel  (bap  Apl  14,  175 1,  d  in 
South  Berwick  Feb  20,  18 16,  m  Feb  4,  1778,  Elizabeth  Nason;  inherited 
land  from  his  father  and  called  "  husbandman  "),  Daniel  (bap  June  3, 
1753,  d  in  Berwick,  "husbandman,"  m  Apl  10,  1777,  Lucy  Richer  of 
Berwick  and  rem  to  Shapleigh),  Philip  (bap  Sep  14,  1755,  m  Jan  30,  1777, 
Mehitable  Underwood  of  Kittery  and  rem  to  Shapleigh,  and  is  supposed 
to  have  had  a  son  "  Philip  Hubbard  of  Kittery,  mariner,"  estate  admin- 

*  Now  Acton.  Me;  formerly  called  "  Hubbardstown  "  because  of  numerous  Hubbard  families  set- 
tling there.    In  Acton  is  a  place  called  "  Hubbard's  Corners." 


II2  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

istered  by  widow  Mehitable  Aug  21,  1809,  inventory  $427.50),  William 
(bap  Aug  20,  1758),  Sarah  (bap  May  24,  176 1,  d  Mch  24,  1810,  at  the 
house  of  John  Cushing,  Esq.,  m  Dec  6,  1780,  William  Leaver,  and  re- 
sided at  Somersworth,  N.  H.),  Thomas  (bap  Apl  10,  1763,  d  before  1810, 
m  Sep  23,  1790,  Lydia  Goodwin — d  Nov  27,  1810 — and  had  Joh/i,  whose 
guardian,  June  19,  1815,  was  Noah  Smith  of  Portsmouth,  N.  H.,  John 
then  being  "  upwards  of  fourteen  "),  Elizabeth  (bap  June  8,  1766,  m  abt 
1788  John  Goodwin),  and  Timothy  (bap  Feb  19,  1769,  d  May  4,  18 10,  m 
Oct  18,  1789,  Jane  Pike). 

SON  OF  PHILIP   AND   HANNAH   (PLUMMER?)    HUBBARD. 

04  ICHABOD — b  in  Berwick  in  1769,  called  "yeoman,"  d  there  Mch 
20,  1807,  buried  in  Hubbard  Cemetery,  near  site  of  old  Philip  Hubbard 
garrison  house  between  Dover  and  South  Berwick.  He  was  an  executor 
of  his  father's  will,  with  his  brother  John.  He  m  Sep  8,  1 794,  Sally  Hodg- 
don,  b  in  Cambridge,  Mass,  d  in  South  Berwick,  dau  John  Hodgdon 
and  the  widow  of  Joseph  Emery.  He  left  all  his  real  estate  to  his 
widow  Sarah,  executrix,  until  his  son  John  became  21,  and  then  she  had 
but  her  third.  To  Moses,  Hannah,  Nancy,  and  Sarah  he  left  $30  apiece. 
His  personal  estate  amounted  to  $249.17.  John  Hodgdon  was  appointed 
their  guardian.  Children — Hannah  Plummer  (b  Apl  10,  1796,  m  Hope 
Nason,  of  South  Berwick),  Nancy  (b  Apl  7,  1798,  d  unm  in  Eutaw,  Ala), 
06  John  Philip  (see  elsewhere),  Sarah  Holly  (b  Apl  15,  1802,  d  unm 
abt  1822),  Moses  (b  Dec  17,  1806,  rem  to  Eutaw,  Ala,  m  there  (1)  Sarah 
Dunlap  and  (2)  Rebecca  Bell. 

SON   OF  JOSEPH   AND  SARAH  (EMERY)   HUBBARD. 

D5  JOSEPH— b  Feb  14,  1748-9,  and  bap  in  Berwick  Feb  19,  1748-9, 
d  there,  farmer,  m  Nov  8,  1770,  Honour  Roberts  (b  in  Berwick  Jan  6, 
1754),  dau  Joshua  and  Ruth  Roberts.  Children  (b  in  Berwick) — James 
(b  Apl  2,  177 1,  d  in  Berwick  Apl  26, 1841,  m  Sarah  Tibbetts — b  in  Roch- 
ester, N.  H.,  Feb  18,  1776,  d  there  Mch  4,  1846 — dau  Joseph  and  Eliza- 
beth (Hussey)  Tibbetts  of  Rochester,  and  had  Joseph  Tibbetts,  b  in 
Rochester  June  11,  1798,  d  there  Sep  19,  1851,  m  Sophia  Burnham,  dau 
William  Burnham  of  Dover;  Joshua  Roberts  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line, 
also  Dr.  Joseph  Hubbard);  Sally  Tibbetts,  b  Feb  10, 1802,  d  in  Rochester,  m 
Capt.  Jesse  Home,  son  Gershom  and  Lydia  (Roberts)  Home  of  Somers- 
worth, N.  H.,  and  had  Gershom,  Lydia,  Gershom,  Sarah,  Jesse  R.,  Mar- 
tha, Albert,  and  Wesley;  James  Roberts,  b  Feb  1,  1804,  d  Feb,  1890,  in 
Lebanon,  Me,  m  (1)  Charity  Clements,  dau  Moses  Clements  of  Berwick, 
m  (2)  Nancy  Clements,  Charity's  sister,  (3)  Mrs.  Patience  (Varney) 
Furbush,  dau  Humphrey  Varney  of  Lebanon,  and  had  by  first  wife 
Amanda,  Henry,  James,  Alonzo,  Calvin,  Charles,  and  by  second  wife 


PHILIP  HUBBARD,   OF  KITTERY,  ME.  II3 

Laura;  Samuel  Tibbetts,  b  Mch  28,  1806,  d  Berwick  Oct  1,  1890,  farmer, 
m  (1)  Achsah  Palmer  of  Milton,  N.  H.,  and  had  Jared  Perkins,  b  in 
Somersworth,  N.  H.;  m  (2)  Harriet  Wing-ate — b  in  Boston,  Mass,  July 
28,  1823 — dau  Daniel  and  Sabina  (Tibbetts)  Wingate  of  Somersworth, 
and  had  Frances  Jane,  b  in  Berwick  May  27,  1846,  m  Millard  F.  Web- 
ster; Ida  Isabelle,  b  in  Berwick  Jan  28,  1857;  and  Mabel,  b  in  Berwick 
May  4,  1862,  m  Leon  Henry  Cilley;  Elizabeth  Tibbetts,  b  May  4,  1808,  d 
in  Aug,  1887,  m  Levi  H.  Wentworth — b  Feb  24,  1804,  d  Nov  3,  1892 — of 
Somersworth,  N.  H.,  no  children;  John,  b  June  4,  1810,  d  in  Somers- 
worth Mch  20,  1882,  m  there  Abigail  Spencer  and  had  Sarah,  George, 
Isabella,  and  Alma;  Dudley,  b  Nov  12,  1812,  resided  in  Boston,  Mass, 
m  Hannah  Stiles — d  in  Boston  in  1891 — and  had  Amanda,  Luella,  and 
Fannie;  George  Washington,  b  Jan  1,  181 6,  lives  in  Somersworth.  N.  H., 
m  Susan  Wingate  Conney,  b  Jan  19,  181 8,  dau  Benjamin  and  Sarah 
(Roberts)  Conney  of  Farmington,  N.  H.;  and  Honour,  b  May  20,  1821, 
m  (1)  Hoit  Williams  of  Dover  and  had  James,  James,  Edward,  and 
Emma,  m  (2)  Benjamin  Foss,  m  (3)  Larkin  D.  Brown  of  Barrington,  N. 
H.;  is  still  living  a  widow),  Sarah  (m  Oct  18,  1791,  Paul  Ellis  of  Roch- 
ester; lived  at  Rome,  Me,  and  had  Ivory,  William,  and  possibly  others), 
Ruth  (m  Aug  22,  1802,  James  Andrews,  Jr.,  of  Coxhall,  Me,  and  had 
Lucy,  Eliza,  Ira,  James,  Leonard  and  Mary),  Abigail  (m  Jan  8,  1800, 
Joshua  Roberts  of  Coxhall  and  Parsonfield,  Me,  and  had  Tristram, 
Mark,  Joshua,  Hubbard,  John,  Joseph,  Betsey,  and  Abigail),  and  Honour 
(m  Oct  6,  1 80 1,  Miles  Ford  of  Coxhall  and  Waterbury,  and  had  John, 
Honour,  Porter,  and  Caroline  and  Adeline,  twins). 

SON  OF  ICHABOD   AND  SALLY  (HODGDON)   HUBBARD. 

D6JOHN  PHILIP— b  in  Berwick  Feb  16,  1800,  farmer,  d  Nov  18, 
1852,  in  Mobile,  Ala,  while  visiting  his  brother  Moses  of  Eutaw,  Ala,  m 
July  30,  1822,  (1)  Hannah  Chadbourne  of  South  Berwick — b  abt  1800,  d 
in  Aug,  1826 — dau  Wentworth  and  Sally  (Butler)  Chadbourne,  and  had 
Wentworth  Chadbourne,  d  y,  and  Lodusky  Malyenah,  d  y.  He  then 
m  Aug  26,  1827,  (2)  Lovey  Butler — b  Jan  15,  1808  (living — 1894),  widow 
of  Daniel  Marsh — of  Sanford,  Me,  dau  Moses  and  Abigail  (Pugsley) 
Butler.  Children — Mary  Elizabeth  (b  Oct  4,  1828,  d  in  South  Berwick 
Aug  18,  1892,  m  Apl,  1 85 1,  John  Simpson — b  in  Elliott,  Me,  Feb,  1820, 
farmer — son  Theophilus  and  Abigail  (Goodwin)  Simpson  of  South  Ber- 
wick, and  had  Olive  Elizabeth,  b  Sep  3,  1851,  genealogical  student,  fur- 
nished for  this  book  illustrations  near  Philip  Hubbard  estate,  lives  at 
South  Berwick,  m  Henry  Dearborn  Noyes— b  July  25,  1837,  in  Warren, 
N.  H.,  d  Oct  10,  1888,  in  South  Berwick;  was  in  business  at  Lynn,  Mass, 
and  Saco,  Me — son  of   Enoch  and  Mary  (Romans)   Noyes  of  Warren; 


II4  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Nancy  Tsabelle,  b  May  18,  1853,  m  George  Cook  of  Rollinsford,  N.  H., 
son  of  John  and  Sarah  (Flower)  Cook;  Carrie  Emma,  b  May  18,  1855,  d 
Auo-  2,  1884,  m  William  E.  Rowe  <  F  South  Berwick;  Charles  Sumner,  b 
Apl  22,  1857,  m  Flora  Belle  Brackett  of  Acton,  Me,  and  lives  in  Ports- 
month,'  N.  H.;  John  Frank,  b  July  17,  1859.  m  Matilda  Conly  of  Guys- 
borough,  Nova  Scotia,  and  lives  in  South  Berwick;  Mary  Ella,  b  May 
30,  1861,'d  unm  at  South  Berwick  July  29,  1889;  George  Albert,  b  May 
5,  '1S63,  'unm,  lives  at  Beverly,  Mass;  Rosanna,  b  Sep  28,  1865,  d  y;  and 
Anna  Simpson,  b  July  9,  1868,  d  at  South  Berwick,  Apl  8,  1883),  Paul 
Richmond  (b  Feb  23,  1830,  unm,  prominent  farmer  at  Topeka,  Kan, 
from  1855  to  1887,  in  Kans  Militia  during  last  war  and  at  battle  of  Le 
Blue,  now  living  in  South  Berwick),  Abigail  Edwards  (b  Apl  28, 1832,  m 
William  P.  Bradford— b  in  Cambridge,  Mass,  July  29,  1827,  d  Apl  20,  1889, 
son  Daniel  and  Abigail  (Emerson)  Bradford  of  South  Berwick),  Moses 

(b  Apl  17,  1834,  rem  to  Evanston,  Wyo,  m and  had  Mary,  Eva 

and  Albert),  Albert  (b  in  Sanford,  Me,  Jan  25,  1836,  unm,  killed  Jan  25, 
1863,  in  battle  at  Coffeyville,  Miss,  mem  Co  I,  7th  Kans  Cavy),  Sarah 
ANN(b  Feb  18,  1840,  d  unm  at  Rollinsford,  N.  H.,  Aug  23,  1866),  and 
George  Henry  (b  Feb  20,  1845,  d  Nov  17,  1861,  unm,  at  Port  Royal,  S. 
C,  mem  8th  Me  Infty). 

SONS  OF  MOSES    AND  ABIGAIL  (HEARD)   HUBBARD. 

E2  JOHN  HEARD— b  in  Wells  Aug  23,  1735,  d  between  Aug  23, 1790, 
and  July  4,  1791,  m  pub  Dec  3,  1748,  to  Hannah  Neal  of  Kittery,  dau 
Andrew  and  Dorcas  Neal,  both  adm  to  church  Jan  25,  1756,  when  Han- 
nah was  also  baptized.  He  was  a  "tanner",  and  a  prominent,  enter- 
prising citizen  of  Wells;  elected  Mch  5,  1759,  and  Mch  10,  1760,  surveyor 
of  highways,  and  was  the  first  inhabitant  of  Wells  to  adopt  a  middle 
name,  which  he  always  signed  in  full.  A  senseless  custom  prevailed  in 
that  period  of  rating  men  in  the  church,  there  being  three  ranks.  JOHN 
HEARD  HUBBARD  was  declared  to  be  of  the  first  rank,  and  his 
brother  Warwick  of  the  second  rank.  He  was  called  "  captain,"  was  a 
Rev.  soldier,  and  was  particularly  prominent  as  a  successful  Indian 
fighter.  His  will,  probated  Mch  25,  1791,  bequeaths  "to  my  son  Heard 
Hubbard  £\o,  to  my  son  Asa  Hubbard  £3.  2s.,  to  my  daughters  Abigail 
Emmons,  Hannah  Hussey,  Eunice  Chaney,  Jane  Neal,  and  the  heirs  of 
my  daughters  Dorcas  Buffum  and  Mary  Gillpatrick,  deceased,  each  a 
new  testament,  they  having  received  their  portion,  and  to  my  son  Noah 
Hubbard  [named  executor  of  the  will]  all  my  lands  and  all  my  estate 
not  already  disposed  of."  The  inventory  amounted  to  ^104.  18.,  and 
the  liabilities  to  ^136.  2.  6.;  so  the  estate  was  insolvent.  Children — 
Abigail  (bap  Jan  25,  1756,  m  June  26,  1770,  Obadiah  Emmons),  Dorcas 


Points  of  Historic   Interest  Upon  the  Old   Philip   Hubbard  Estate 

AT    KlTTERV,    ME. 

(1)  Site  of  Old  Tan  Yard.    (2)  The  Fowling  Marsh.    (3)  The  Old  Hubbard  Burying  Ground. 

(Furnished  by  Mrs.  Olive  Elizabeth  Noyes  of  South  Berwick,  Me.) 

115 


j  j  6  HUBBA  RD  HIS  TOR  Y  A  ND   GENE  A  LOGY. 

(bap  Jan  25,  1756,  m Buffnm),  Hannah  (bap  Feb  8,  1756,  d  before 

1790,  m  at  Berwick  Jan  21,  1775,  Simeon  Hussey),  Mary  Heard  (bap 
Feb  8,  1756,  d  before  1790,  m  (pub  Feb  23,  1776)  Joshua  Gillpatrick  of 
Wells),  Eunice  (bap  Mch  13,  1757,  m  June  16,  1783,  Benjamin  Chaney 
of  Wells),  Jane  (bap  Apl  20,  1760,  m  (?)  July  27,  1778,  Andrew  Neal — 
b  Mch  12,  1742-3 — of  Berwick,  son  John  and  Patience  (Johnson)  Neal), 
E6  Heard  (see  elsewhere),  Noah  (bap  Oct  1,  1764,  d  before  1823,  m  Mch 
18,  1790,  Meribah  Littlefield — b  1767,  bap  Sep  3,  1803,  d  Dec  20,  1823 — 
and  had  William,  Samuel,  Polly  and  Betsey  (and  probably  others),  all 
bap  Sep  3,  1803),  and  Asa  (bap  Oct  26,  1766,  lived  in  Francisborough, 
now  Cornish),  also  Limington,  "husbandman,"  d  before  Sep  16,  1805 
(when  his  widow  Lydia  administered  upon  his  estate,  inventory  $372.45; 

she  afterward  m Chadbourne);  he  m  Jan  1,  1792,  Lydia  Cheney 

and  had  Hannah  who  m  Elder  John  Pike  of  Fryeburg  and  had  Lydia, 
Hannah,  John  Judson,  and  Dolly;  and  Reuben  who  m  Lydia  Small,  lived 
in  Thorndike,  Me,  and  had  Small  and  Bethiah). 

E3  JAMES — b  Feb  29,  1728,  m  Feb  28,  1752,  Mary  Bean  (living  in 
1783),  dau  of  John  and  Mary  (Hubbard)  Bean  of  York.  He  lived  in 
Kittery,  but  by  June  13,  1754,  had  removed  to  Wells,  or  to  that  part 
afterward  set  off  as  Kennebunk.  In  1749  he  was  architect  and  builder 
of  Second  Cong.  Church  at  Wells,  a  two-story  building  30  feet  long,  the 
nails  in  which  were  wrought  by  hand  at  the  anvil.  Mch  10,  1760,  he 
was  chosen  surveyor  of  highways.  During  subsequent  periods  he  was 
chosen  constable,  tithingman,  warden  and  surveyor  of  lumber,  select- 
man, and  auditor  of  town  accounts,  and  lived  in  Kennebunk.  He  was 
firm  and  resolute  in  his  devotion  to  principle,  and  was  elected  Mch  22, 
1775,  member  of  committee  on  correspondence  dealing  with  war  mat- 
ters. Afterward  he  enlisted  a  company  for  eight  months  and  marched 
to  Cambridge,  Mass.,  where  he  was  killed.  "Joseph  Storer,  John  Lit- 
tlefield, Noah  M.  Littlefield,  and  JAMES  HUBBARD  were  active  offi- 
cers in  the  great  struggle  and  sealed  their  devotion  to  their  country 
with  their  blood,"  reads  the  history  of  Wells  and  Kennebunk.  The  in- 
ventory of  his  estate,  sworn  to  Oct  5,  1776,  by  Mary,  his  widow, 
amounted  to  ^465.1.  Children — Mary  (b  abt  1760,  d  Mch  20,  1794,  m 
Feb  11,  1776,  Richard  Gillpatrick,  blacksmith,  d  Sep  15,  1828,  son  of 
James  Gillpatrick  of  Ireland,  and  had  Dimon,  Sally  and  Daniel),  Abi- 
gail, or  "Nabby,"  (b  about  1764,  d  abt  1785-6,  m  Jan  18,  1783,  John 
Bourn,  Jr — b  1759,  Rev  soldier  at  16,  married  twice  afterward  and  had 
ten  more  children — of  Wells,  and  had  Olive,  b  July  10,  1784^  Feb,  1803, 
and  Samuel,  h  Dec  1,  1785,  d  July,  1809),  Hannah  (b  1767,  d  Oct  15, 
1851,  m  Feb  23,  1786,  Daniel  Wise— b  1761,  d  May  6,  1843,  mariner  and 
Rev  soldier,  son  of  James  and  gr  son  Rev.  Jeremiah  Wise  of  Berwick — 


PHILIP  HUBBARD,    OF  HITTER  Y,   ME. 


1 1 


and  had  Betsey,  John,  Mary,  Dankl,  George  and  Hannah),  James  (b  abt 
1745,  called  "joiner,"  was  also  a  "  sea  captain,"  m  Dorothy  Couzens  of 
Wells  and  d  before  June  28,  1796,  inventory  of  estate  $306.32,  liabilities 
$210.98),   Diamond,   or    "  Dimon  "    (b   after    1745,   mariner,    m   (?)   Ta- 

bitha d  18 16,  and  had  John,  Dimon  who  m  Phebe ,  William, 

Mary,  Hannah,  and  Caroline),  and  Moses  (b  after  1745,  d  after  1800, 
large  landholder,  called  "joiner,"  and  attorney  in  the  administration  of 
his  father's  estate  Nov  14,  1783). 

E4  WARWICK— b  in  Berwick  Aug  31,  1731,  d  in  WTells  Apl,  1792,  m 
July  16,  1757,  Mary  Littlefield  of  Wells  ;  farmer;  elected  Mch  21,  1768, 
surveyor  of  highways,  tithingman,  etc.;  positions  held  several  terms; 
mem  Second  Cong.  Church  of  Wells  and  occupied  "  pew  in  gallery." 
This  old  church  was  afterward  bought  by  him  and  torn  down  for  the 
lumber.  He  was  called  a  "joiner,"  also  "gentleman;"  and  the  inven- 
tory of  his  estate,  sworn  to  June  28,  1792,  by  his  son  Jeremiah,  the  ad- 
ministrator, amounted  to  ^410.11.4.  Children — Jeremiah  (b  Mch  9, 
1758,  d  Oct  21,  1825,  selectman  and  prominent  citizen,  lived  in  Kenne- 
bunk  and  Porter,  Me.,  called  "joiner  '  and  "husbandman,"  m  Jan  4, 
1781,  Hannah  Hobbs — b  July  9,  1758 — and  had  Nathaniel,  b  Nov  2^, 
1 78 1,  possibly  the  one  who  had  Samuel  Fairfield,  b  in  Canaan,  Me.; 
Joshua,  b  Sep  26,  1783,  m  possibly  (?)  Feb  24,  1816,  Dorcas  Maxwell;  Mary, 
b  Jan  20,  1786;  Sarah,  b  June  13,  1788,  m  possibly  (?)  June  17,  1809, 
Samuel  Tripp  of  Arundell;  Warwick,  b  Oct  4,  1790;  Nancy,  b  Mch  18, 
1793'  Jeremiah,  b  Aug  31,  1795,  m  Jan  1,  1818,  Jemima  Stewart  and 
had  Charles,  bSep  25,  i8i8,and  Benjamin, b  Sep  2,  1820;  Joseph,h  Oct  14, 
1797;  Rufus,  b  Mch  16,  1800,  d  in  Gardner,  Me.,  1830,  m  at  Portsmouth, 
N.  H.,  Nov  23,  1826,  Elizabeth  Lake — b  July  19,  1805,  d  in  Wells  Dec 
17,  1843 — dau  John  and  Hannah  (Salter)  Lake,  and  had  John  Wesley,  b 
at  Saco,  Me.,  July  15,  1826,  farmer,  who  m  at  Portsmouth,  Apl  6,  1852, 
Pamelia  Wesley  Philbrook — b  at  Portsmouth  Aug  22,  1829 — dau  Daniel 
and  Pamelia  (Gimnison)  Philbrook,  and  had  Elizabeth  Lake,  Rufus 
Peabody,  and  George  Philbrook;  and  Abigail,  b  May  26,  1802,  d  Jan  8, 
1821);  Moses  (bap  Feb  1,  1761,  d  May  2,  1840,  m  at  Wells  Aug  12,  1784, 
(1)  Sally  Gooch,  dau  Samuel  and  Sarah  Gooch,  and  had  Samuel,  b  Nov 
30,  1789,  d  Dec  13,  1854;  m  Feb  23,  1798,  at  Wells  (2)  Hannah  (Sewall) 
Gooch,  d  July  29,  1840,  and  had  Benjamin,  b  Oct  13,  1798;  John,  b  June 
23,  1804;  Sally,  b  July  30,  1809;  and  Charles,  b  Dec  23,  1S12,  Mary  (bap 
Nov  6,  1763,  m  May  24,  1783,  Josiah  Stimson,  of  Biddeford),  and 
William  (b  1766,  bap  Oct  15,  1768,  d  Dec  21,  1855,  m  Oct  11,  1792,  Mary 
Gooch,  who  had  William,  b  Apl  15,  1793,  d  Mch  8,  1816,  who  possibly  m 
(?)  Feb  14,  1 81 2,  Hannah  Day;  Jane,  b  Nov  20,  1795,  who  possibly  m 
(?)   Feb  8,    1 82 1,    Nehemiah  Getchell  of  Wells;  Sally,  b  Oct    6,   1797: 


nS  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Betsey,  b  May  8,  1S01,  who  possibly  m  (?)  July  30,  181 8,  Joshua  Kimball 
of  Wells;  John,  b  June  12,  1803,  d  at  sea  Dec  10,  1825;  Lavinia,  b  Sep 
2,  1805;  Mary,  b  Dec  30,  1807;  Seth,  b  June  13,  181 2,  and  Samuel,  b  Mch 
24,  1815). 

£>  JOSEPH—  b  in  Kittery  Aug   1,    1741,   d  Nov  25,  1819,  m  abt  1764 
Ann  Gowan  (b  in  Kittery  May  8,  1750,  d  in  Wells  Aug   18,  1796),  dau 
James  and  Lois  Gowan  of  Kittery,  and  had  nine  children.     He  m  Sep 
20,  1797,  Alice  (b    1763,  d  Jan   17,   1852),  dau  Joseph  and  Mary  Wheel- 
wright of  Wells.     Alice  Wheelwright  m  (1)  Timothy  Parsons  of  York, 
(2)  Jeremiah  M.  Eaton   of  Wells,  (3)  Col.  Joseph  Hubbard,  and  Feb  8, 
1823,  (4)  Capt.  Thomas  Bragdon  of  Wells.     JOSEPH  HUBBARD  was 
a  prominent  person  of  his  time;  on  Committee  of  Correspondence  in 
1773  and  a  Captain  in  the  Revolutionary  War.     He  is  spoken  of  in  His- 
tory of  Wells  and  Kennebunk  as  Colonel  of  a  regiment,  and  empowered 
also  to  enlist  men  for  three  years'  service  in  the  Revolution.     He  was  a 
"leather-dresser"  by  occupation,  but  in  1781  was  called  "gentleman." 
Children — Hannah  (b  in  Kittery  1765,  d  Sep   10,   1844,  at  Wells,  m  Dec 
:3,  r785>  Samuel  Jacobs,  b  1764,  drowned  on  Wells  Bar  Apl  7,  1805,  and 
had  Dorcas,  b  May   13,  1787,   d  Apl    14,  1790;  Abigail,  b  July  1,  1789; 
Joshua,  b  Oct  19,  1791,  d  June  23,  1814;  James,  b  May  13,   1794;  Joseph, 
b  Jan  25,  1797;  Ebenezer,  b  July  12,  1799,  d  Mch  14,   1819;  Aimer,  b  Jan 
2,  1802,  d  Oct  28,  1820;  and  Dorcas,  b  Mch  6,  1804),  Phebe  (b  in  Kittery, 
1767,  d  Feb  10,   1847,  m  Mch   15,  1798,  Stephen  Stevens — b  1769,  d  Jan 
22,  1858 — son  of  Jeremy  and  Abigail  Stevens  of  Wells,  and  had  Abigail, 
b  Mch   16,   1800;  Ebenezer,  b  Nov  20,  1801;   Theodore,  b  Jan   18,  1803; 
Anna,  b  Mch  7,  1805;  Louisa,  b  Dec  25,  1808;  and  Rufus,  b  May  12,  1810), 
Abigail  (b  in  Kittery,  1770,  d  Feb  27,    1841,  m  Apl  5,  1792,  James  Don- 
nell — d  Mch  4,  1836 — and  had   John,  b  July  14,  1792,  d  1796;  Samuel,  b 
Nov  12,  1794,  d  1796;  Benjamin,  b  Nov  12,  1796;  James,  b  Oct   10,  1798; 
Oliver,  b  Feb  14,  1800;  Samuel,  b  Mch  12,  1802;  Anna,  b  Nov  29,  1804; 
Mary,  b  Nov  23,  1S06;  Miriam  S.,  b  Dec  19,  1807;  Henry  D.,  b  Dec  12, 
1809;  and  Eliza,  b  Sep  13,  1811),  Dorcas  (b  in  Wells  1772,  d  Aug  13, 
1859,  m  Jan  7,  1796,  Nathaniel  Clark  of  Sanford,b  1773,  d  Aug  16,  1840), 
Joseph  (b  in  Wells  July  25,  1781,  d  June  18,  1856,  m  Jan  28,  1823,  Lucy 
Winn — d  Feb   7,    1829 — of  Wells,  and  had  Benjamin),  Benjamin  (b  in 
Wells  Dec  22,  1783,  d  in  West  Indies  Oct  2,  1818,  m  Apl  16,  1813,  Pris- 
cilla  Bourn — b  May  22,  1788,  d  Mch  7,   1858,  at  William  Gooch's  house 
in  Wells,  dau  Isaac  and  Susan   Bourn,  and  had  Benjamin,  b  Aug  29, 
1817,  d  May  27,  1818),  James  (b  in  Wells  Feb  20,  1789,  d  May  11,  1851, 
lived  in  Eliot,  Me.,  on  farm  once  owned  by  his  uncle,  Joshua  Hubbard, 
m  Apl  10,  1814,  Sally  Paul  of  Kittery,  b   1792,  d  Feb    13,  1877,  and  had 
Sally,  b  Oct  2,  1815,  d  Dec  i,  1818;  Sally,  b  Apl  5,  1819,  m  1840  Thomas 


PHILIP  HUBBARD,   OF  KITTERY,  ME.  lig 

C.  Stacy,  d  1844,  leaving  James  Gowati,  b  Dec  6,  1S40,  d  1846,  and 
George  Thomas,  b  May  23,  1844;  James  G,  b  June  18,  1821,  d  Oct  13, 
1826;  Abigail  Heard,  b  June  16,  1823,  d  Oct  27,  1826;  Moses  Paul,  bin 
Eliot,  Me.,  Feb  13,  1826,  lives  in  San  Francisco,  Cal.;  James,  b  Aug  11, 
1828,  lives  in  Eliot;  Joseph,  b  Jan  22,  1831,  d  in  Placer  County,  Cal., 
March  22,  1869;  and  Boreas,  b  July  28,  1833,  lives  in  Eliot),  Mehitable 
(b  in  Wells  Feb  22,  1792,  d  unm  Sep  2,  1865,  at  the  house  of  her  nephew 
Benjamin  Hubbard),  and  Joshua  (b  in  Wells  May  19,  1795,  remained  on 
the  homestead  in  Wells,  d  Sep  22,  1868,  m  June  18,  1820,  Alice  Hart,  b 
June,  12,  1 80 1,  d  May  13,  1884,  and  had  Joseph,  b  July  28,  182 1,  d  Oct  4, 
1893,  who  m  Apl  17,  1853,  Catherine  Butland,  dau  Daniel  and  Polly  But- 
land  of  Wells,  and  had  Cordelia,  b  Mch  13,  1855,  rem  to  Biddeford,  and 
Oscar  Joseph,  b  Jan  27,  1861,  farmer,  lives  in  Wells,  m  Mary  Linda  Clark 
of  Sanford,  Me.;  and  Henry  H.,  b  Jan  24,  1824,  d  unm  Nov  10,  1891). 

SON  OF    JOHN   HEARD  AND   HANNAH   (NEAL)   HUBBARD. 

E^  HEARD — bap  in  Wells  Oct  5,  1760.  He  afterward  prefixed 
"John  "  to  his  name,  but  was  commonly  known  as  "  Heard,"  d  in  May, 
1826,  m  Mch  4,  1792,  his  cousin,  Ruth  Allen,  a  Quakeress,  of  Sanford, 
Me.,  and  lived  in  Francesborough,  also  Cornish,  Me.  Children — 
Hannah  (b  Dec  28,  1792),  £7  Allen  (see  elsewhere),  Ephraim  (b  Feb  28, 
1798),  Dorcas  (b  Jan  10,  1800,  d  in  Limington,  Me.,  Aug  12,  1803), 
Dorcas  (b  Aug  8,  1803,  lived  in  Limington),  Anna  (b  Jan  6,  1805),, 
Eunice  (b  July  4,  1807,  d  in  1837),  Ruth  Allen  (b  Sep  26,  1S09),  and 
John  Allen  (b  Dec  1,  1812,  d  Jan  30,  1816). 

SON   OF  JOHN   HEARD   AND   RUTH   (ALLEN)   HUBBARD. 

E7  ALLEN — b  Jan  28,  1795,  d  Nov  21,  1877,  m  (by  Elder  Kinsman) 
Jan  3,  1820,  Sarah  Bradbury  Lord  (b  in  Parsonfield  Jan  2,  1800,  d  in 
Hiram,  Me.),  dau  Thomas  Lord  of  Limerick.  ALLEN  was  captain  in 
a  militia  company;  highly  esteemed,  and  a  representative  to  Augusta, 
the  capital  of  Maine,  in  1847.  Children — John  Allen  (b  in  Hiram,  Nov 
3, 1820,  d  Feb  24,  1893,  m  Nov  27,  1842,  Hannah  (Hubbard)  Pike,  and  had 
Silas,  who  m  Susan  Libby  and  had  Hannah,  Allen,  Emily,  Leroy  and 
Wellington;  and  Mary,  unm),  Thomas  Lord  (b  Jan  5,  1823,  d  Oct  18, 
187 1,  lived  in  Hiram,  m  Nov  21,  1844,  Mary  Jane  Mason,  and  had  Clinton 
Peary,  physician,  Lovell,  Me.,  who  m  Esther  Wentworth,  and  had 
Fanny,  Carrie,  and  Elwin;  Elwin  Thomas,  b  Jan  16,  1854,  Dartmouth 
Med  Coll  1877,  physician  at  Tamworth,  N.  H.,  1878-82,  N.  Y.  Polyclinics 

1884-5,  practiced  in  Rochester,  N.  H.,  d  Dec  14,  1894,  m Churchill 

of  Madison,  N.  H.;  and  Lansing  H.,  b  Jan  17,  1859,  m  Iza  Fessenden, 
and  had   Leman),   Hannah   Fogg  b  July  23,    1820,  m  May  4,  1846,(1) 


120 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 


Samuel  Boothby  of  Saco,  Me.;  d  June  21,  1862,  and  had  Emma;  m  Aug 
12,  1864,  (2)  Joshua  Nason,  d  May  4,  1871,  and  had  Annie,  Harry,  and 
Sarah;  m  Oct,  1876,  (3)  John  Owen),  Mary  Pease  (b  Mch  5,  183°,  d 
Sep  20,  1831),  Erastus  (b  Apl  25, 1832,  physician,  m  Feb  27,  1855,  Jane 
Abbott,  and  had  Hattie,  who  m  Edward  Mayberry,  and  had  Alice. 
Jane  (Abbott)  Hubbard  d.,  and  Dr.  Erastus  rem  to  Fuerte,  Mexico,  m, 
and  had  there  several  children),  Daniel  Brackett  (b  Apl  16,  1835, 
teacher  of  Mather  School  at  Dorchester,  Mass.,  consul  at  Annaberg, 
lawyer  at  North  Grafton,  Mass.,  m  Apl,  1864,(1)  Adelaide  Wilcox,  d 
Apl  2,  1891;  m  Jan  1,  1892,  (2)  Louisa  Grommes),  Henry  Hyde  (b  Dec 
20,  1838,  d  Oct  14,  1839),  William  Henry  (b  June  5,  1840,  d  Aug  2,  1863, 
on  U.  S.  S.  "  Alabama,")  and  Simeon  Pease  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line 
Frank  Allen  Hubbard). 


Old  warriors  !  whose  adored  remains,  in  weeping  vaults  her  hallowed  earth  contains— Alexander 
Pope. 


The  original  records  of  the  War  of  the  devolution  are  scattered  over  the  world— some  in  England 
(captured  by  the  enemy),  some  in  the  hands  of  private  individuals,  and  the  balance  (not  burned  or 
destroyed  in  various  conflicts)  are  in  the  custody  of  libraries  and  State  governments ;  also  in  the  State, 
War,  Navy,  Pension,  Treasury  and  Interior  Departments  at  Washington,  D.  C.  These  valuable  docu- 
ments are  practically  inaccessible,  particularly  in  the  State  Department,  where  the  most  important 
ones  are,  they  being  not  yet  indexed  or  open  to  public  scrutiny  ;  hence  the  difficulty  of  furnishing  a 
complete  roster  of  all  -Hubbard"'  combatants  (probably,  though,  nine-tenths  of  the  whole  number 
are  contained  herein)  or  full  data  about  those  hereinafter  mentioned.  The  compiler  embraced  some 
unusual  opportunities,  however,  for  examination  of  a  part  of  the  records  in  government  custody,  and 
has  copied  from  them  the  information  substantially  as  found,  which,  though  incomplete  and  dis- 
jointed, is  sufficient  to  show  actual  participation  in  the  great  conflict.  In  many  cases  the  length  i  >f 
service  is  greater  than  the  subjoined  data  would  indicate.  Where  the  faintest  uncertainty  existed 
whether  those  of  the  same  name  were  identical  or  not,  the  name  will  be  found  repeated.  When 
known,  the  names  of  commanders  of  organizations  are  given.  The  designations  "  company,"  "  regi- 
ment," or  "battalion,"  are  usually  omitted  to  save  space.  Occasionally  will  be  found  conflicting 
dates,  not  explainable.  No  "Hubbards  '  were  discovered  among  Maryland,  Delaware,  Georgia, 
North  Carolina,  or  South  Carolina  troops.  Not  conclusive  proof,  however,  that  there  were  none. 
Some  soldiers  went  from  their  own  into  other  States  and  enlisted. 

Again  the  compiler  calls  attention  to  the  grotesque  spelling  of  this  and  earlier  periods.  There  is 
probably  no  surname  in  its  transmission  from  the  ancient  to  the  present  epoch  that  has  not  suffered 
radical  changes.  So  readers  in  tracing  ancestry  from  old  documents  must  continually  remember  that 
sounds  to  the  ear  and  not  forms  to  the  eye  governed  "ye  olden  scribe,"  and  be  not,  consequently, 
diverted  from  the  trail.  For  instance,  in  the  Massachusetts  Revolutionary  archives  on  file  in  the 
State  House  at  Boston  the  name  "  Hawkes  Hubbard  "  gives  the  same  war  service  under  the  names 
Hobart,  Hobard,  Hubbart,  and  Hubbard,  thus  proving  them  to  be  identical.  Being  of  Hingham, 
where  "Hobarts"  were  numerous,  he  doubtless  descended  from  Edmund  Hobart,  whose  posterity- 
have  nearly  all  retained  the  "Hobart "  form  of  spelling  their  name. 

Under  Miscellaneous  is  given  a  list  of  some  of  the  patriotic  societies  of  the  United  States. 

RHODE  ISLAND. 

JOHN— ensign  in  First  Canadian,  Col  James  Livingston's  Regiment, 
Dec    1 8,    1776;  transferred  Feb  1,  1779,  to  Second  Rhode  Island 
Regiment,  commanded  by  Col.  Israel  Angell. 

NEW  JERSEY. 
EPHRAIM— private.     [Other  particulars  unknown.] 


122  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

ELIPHALET — private  in  First  Battalion,  second  establishment; 
corporal  in  Captain  Dayton's  Company,  Third  Regiment;  corporal  also 
in  First  Regiment. 

JACOB — surgeon  in  First  Regiment  from  Monmouth,  June  10,  1780; 
com'd  in  1776.     [JACOBUS,  correct  name — See  Long  Island  Hubbards.] 

JACOBUS — private,  from  Monmouth.    [Other  particulars  unknown.] 

PENNSYLVANIA. 

CHRISTIAN — pvt;  in  service  June  7,  1777,  in  Col  Thomas  Proctor's 
Penn  Arty;  pensioner  under  Act  of  Congress  of  March  14,  1818. 

JONATHAN— pvt,  Capt  Thomas  Arnold,  Col  Louis  Nicola's  Invalid 
Regiment,  "  as  it  was  discharged  in  April,  1783." 

SOUTHWICK— pvt,  [Capt  Moses  McFarland's  Co.?]  Col  Louis 
Nicola's  Invalid  Regiment. 

RICHARD— pvt,  [Capt  John  R  McGowan's  Co.?]  Col  Louis  Nicola's 
Invalid  Regiment. 

VIRGINIA. 

The  following  were  entitled  to  land  bounty  for  3  yrs'  service  :  Amos,  Elias,  Eppa,  James  (seaman), 
Jessee,  John  (soldier),  and  Thomas  (sergt). 

The  names  of  all  the  following  Hubbards  are  spelled  in  the  records  with  two  "  b  "s  (see  "  Virginia 
Hubbards  "). 

AMOS — seaman  in  State  Navy. 

ELIAS — soldier,  inf.,  Cont.  Line. 

EPPA— soldier,  inf.,  Cont.  Line. 

JAMES— seaman  in  State  Navy.  JAMES— pvt,  Cont.  Line;  received 
200  acres  for  3  yrs*  services. 

JESSEE — seaman  in  State  Navy. 

JOHN — midshipman,  navy;  received  Feb  6,  78,  2,666  2-3  acres  for 
3  yrs'  services.     JOHN — soldier,  inf.,  Cont.  Line. 

OBEDIAH— pvt,  Capt  Everard  Meade,  Col  Alex  Spottswood's  2d 
Virginia  Regt;  present  from  Jan  to  June,  77. 

THOMAS — Reg'l  Quartermaster,  1st  Virginia  Regiment  in  77  and 
up  to  May  1,  78.     THOMAS— sergt,  inf.,  Cont.  Line. 

VERMONT. 

Vermont  was  not  a  state  in  1775,  consequently  there  were  no  state  regiments.  Companies  were 
formed,  however,  in  this  section  and  called  out  from  time  to  time  as  occasion  demanded,  and  then 
relieved  from  duty.  These  names  have  been  taken  from  the  "  Pay-Roils,"  "  Pay-Tables  "  and  "  Or- 
ders and  Receipts  "  in  the  Adjutant-General's  Office,  Montpelier,  Vt. 

ABEL — pvt,  Capt  Abel  Merriam,  Col  Ebenezer  Allen;  served  Oct 
14,  80,  to  Oct  29,  80. 


REVOL I 'TIOXARY  WAR  HUBBARD  PA  TRIOTS.      l  2 


}c  iiiiTJhgj 


<fk*k\  *<•!, 


BATTLE  GROUND    OF    HUBBARDTON,  VERMONT. 

And  ever  since  historian  writ,  and  ever  since  a  bard  could  sing. 
Doth  each  esalt,  with  all  his  wit,  the  noble  art  of  murdering. 
And  while  in  fashion  picturesque,  the  poet  rhymes  of  blood  and  blows. 
The  grave  historian,  at  his  desk,  describes  the  same  in  classic  prose. 

—  William  Makepeace  Thackeray. 


In  the  Spring  of  1774  two  families  left  Connecticut  and  settled  on  a  very  arable  and  high  rolling 
table-land  in  Rutland  County  on  a  spur  of  the  Green  Mountains,  called,  locally,  Pittsford  Mountains. 
This  territory  was  then  in  New  York  State.  In  1775  they  were  followed  by  seven  other  Connecticut 
families,  some  of  which  were  named  Hickock,  Hubbard,  Keeler,  Kellogg  and  Selleck.  Hubbard  ton  is 
accessible  by  roads  running  from  Port  Orwell  on  Lake  Champlain,  Ticonderoga,  Crown  Point  and 
Skenesborough. 

July  7,  1777,  a  hot  battle  was  fought  here,  the  principal  fighting  being  done  on  the  slope  between 
the  meeting-house  and  the  big  tree  seen  in  the  foreground.  The  British  were  victorious  in  this  con- 
test, and  were  commanded  by  General  Fraser,  who  was  reinforced  late  in  the  contest  by  General 
Reidisel  with  his  German  regiment.  Colonels  Warner  and  Francis  commanded  the  American  troops, 
the  latter  meeting  here  a  brave  death.  The  defection  of  Colonel  Hale  with  700  men  was  the  principal 
cause  of  the  American  defeat.  He  claimed  that  his  men  were  too  sick  and  worn  out  to  fight  and 
retreated  with  them  toward  Castleton,  about  six  miles  southwest,  to  join  General  St.  Clair,  who  was 
then  stationed  there.  The  day  before  this  battle  a  band  of  Indians  and  Tories  under  Captain  Sher- 
wood captured  the  male  inhabitants  of  Hubbardton  and  confined  them  at  Ticonderoga.  Two  after- 
ward escaped.  The  rest  were  rescued  upon  the  surrender  of  Burgoyne.  The  females  and  children  of 
the  deserted  families  then  retraced  their  steps  over  the  rocky  hills  to  their  old  Connecticut  homes. 
From  the  prominent  boulder  in  the  foreground  a  British  soldier  was  shot  dead  by  an  American  sentry, 
as  he  leaped  upon  it  to  reconnoiter  the  American  encampment. 


GENERAL    GEORGE    WASHINGTON. 

(Painted  in  1788  by  Col.  John  Trumbull,  an  Aide-de-camp,  and  son  of  Jonathan  Trumbull.) 
See  Page  342  for  Autographic  Letter  to  Paymaster  General  Nehemiah  Hubbard. 


124 


REVOLUTIONARY  WAR  HUBBARD  PATRIOTS.       I2S 

EBENEZER— pvt,  Capt  Tehan  Noble,  Col  Warren;  served  Nov  7, 
78,  to  Nov  13,  78.  EBENEZER— pvt,  Capt  Dan'l  Smith,  Col  Ira 
Allen;  served  12  days  in  Oct,  80. 

ELDAD — pvt,  Capt  John  Marcy,  Maj  Benj  Wait's  detachment; 
served  Oct  16,  80,  to  Oct  18,  80,  and  Mch  16,  81.  ELDAD — pvt,  Capt 
Abel  Marsh;  served  15  days  from  Oct  13,  77.  ELDAD — pvt,  Capt 
Asahel  Smith,  Lt  Col  Safford;  served  Oct  20,  80,  to  Nov  4,  80. 

ELIJAH— pvt,  Capt  John  Petty,  Col  Wm  Williams;  served  9  days 
from  Aug  29,  77. 

ELISHA — corpl,  Lieut  Moses  Johnson,  Col  Wm  Williams;  served 
Sept  25,  77,  to  Oct  15,  77. 

ELNATHAN — pvt,  Capt  Sam'l  Stow  Savage;  served  3  days  from 
Mch  16,  81. 

EPHRAIM— pvt,  Lieut  Asahel  Smith,  Lt-Col  Safford;  served  Oct 
20,  80,  to  Nov  9,  80. 

GEORGE — pvt,  Capt  Wm  Heaton;  paid  for  12  days' services  from 
Aug  80,  to  Apl,  81. 

SELAH — pvt,  Capt  Abel  Merriam,  Col  Ebenezer  Allen;  served  Oct 
20,  80,  to  Oct  29,  80.  SELAH— pvt,  Capt  Jacob  Wood,  Col  Thomas 
Lee;  served  Oct  30  and  31,  81.  SELAH,  JR — pvt,  Capt  Jacob  Wood, 
Col  Thomas  Lee;  served  June  10  and  11,  81. 

WATTS,  JR  (or  WATES)— pvt,  Capt  John  Marcy,  Maj  Benj  Wait's 
detachment;  served  Oct  16,  80,  to  Oct  21,  80. 

WILLIAM — sergt,  Capt  Tehan  Noble,  Col  Ira  Allen;  served  5  days 
from  Mch  26,  80. 

NEW  YORK. 

DAVID — pvt,  in  Col  [Philip,  Abraham  ?]  Van  Alstyn's  regt. 

ELDAD — pvt,  Capt  Benjamin  Wait,  Maj  Jacob  Hoisington;  enl  Aug 
19,  76. 

EZEKIEL— Capt  Noah  Wheeler,  Col  Roswell  Hopkins. 

JEREMIAH — ensign,  Capts  Elijah  Bostwick  and  Asa  Douglass, 
Capt  William  Bradford  Whiting's  17th  regt,  Kings  District;  appt'd 
June  29,  81,  vice  Soul. 

JOHN— pvt,  Capt  Peter  Van  Renselaer,  Col  Marinus  Willett.  JOHN, 
pvt,  Capt  Jonathan  Pearsee,  4th  Regt  N.  Y.  Line;  enl  May  21,  77,  for 
war;  deserted  Apl  1,  80;  mustered  again  in  July,  80,  and  served  to  Jan, 
82.  JOHN — ensign,  Capt  Peter  Van  Renselaer;  Col  James  Livingston; 
com'd  Dec  18,  76;  transf  to  Col  Israel  Angell's  regt  Feb  1,  79.  JOHN — 
pvt,  Capt  Thomas  Skinner,  Col  Marinus  Skinner. 

JONATHAN— sergt,  Capt  [Anthony,  Myndert  ?]  Van  Schaick's  com- 
pany. 


I26  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

JOSEPH— corpl,Capt  Joshua  Drake,  Col  William  Malcom.  JOSEPH, 
corpl;  Capt  Gideon  King,  Col  [Joshua  ?]  Whiting.  JOSEPH— pvt,  Capt 
Joshua  Drake,  Col  William  Malcom. 

JOSHUA— corpl,  Capt  Dirk  Hansen,  2d  Co  N.  Y.  Line,  Col  James 
Livingston;  enl  Jan  1,  77,  for  war;  died  Oct  16,  80. 

MILES — corpl,  Capt  Nathaniel  Donnell's  2d  Co,  Col  Ebnezer  Stevens' 
regt  N.  Y.  Arty. 

PETER — ensign,  Capt  Phenihas  Rumsey,  Col  Jesse  Woodhull's 
Orange  County  regt;  com'd  in  78  [probably  in  Feb]. 

PRINCE— pvt,  Capt  Andrew  White,  Col  Fred  Wessenfels. 

PRIME  [possibly  "  Prince  "] — pvt,  Capt  Colbe  Chamberlain,  Col  Louis 
Dubois. 

REUBEN— corpl,  Capt  Noah  Wheeler,  Col  Roswell  Hopkins— 
RUBIN — pvt,  Capt  Colbe  Chamberlain,  Col  Louis  Hopkins. 

SAMUEL— pvt,  Capt  Silas  Gray,  Col  Marinus  Willett.  SAMUEL— 
Lt,  Capt  Rem  Williamson  (Gravesend),  Col  Richard  Van  Brunt's  Long 
Island  (Kings  Co)  Militia;  com'd  in  78  [probably  in  Mch]. 

WILLIAM— corpl,  Capt  Lothrop  Allen,  Col  John  Harper.  WIL- 
LIAM— pvt,  Capt  Gideon  King,  Col  Van  Renselaer. 

There  was  a  Capt  David  "  Hubby  "  in  Col  Thomas'  regt,  also  privates  John  and  Jonathan 
"  Hubby  "  in  same  regt.    Possibly  they  were  "  Hubbards." 

NEW  HAMPSHIRE. 

BENJAMIN— pvt,  Capt  Moses  Baker,  Lt  Col  Joseph  Welch;  at  Sara- 
toga in  Oct,  77. 

DAVID  (Charlestown) — drummer,  Capt  Jeremiah  Stiles,  Col  Paul 
Dudley  Sargent. 

ELISHA— sergt,  Capt  Ezra  Towne,  Col  James  Reed;  enl  Apl  23,  75; 
served  3  months,  16  days. 

EPHRAIM  (Chesterfield,  Cheshire  County,)— sergt,  Capt  Joseph 
Burt,  Col  Samuel  Ashley;  went  to  Cambridge  in  75;  at  Ticonderoga 
in  Oct  and  Nov,  76. 

JACOB — pvt,  Capt  Nicholas  Gilman,  Col  Alexander  Scammell;  enl 
in  June,  79,  for  1  year. 

JAMES— pvt,  Capt  Stephen  Hodgdon,  Col  Joshua  Wingate's  "  Re- 
turn of  Troops"  defending  Piscataqua  Harbor  in  Nov,  75. 

JOHN— pvt,  Capt  John  Calfe,  Col  T.  Bartlett;  "  paid  him  £8,  8.?. 
4<r/."  JOHN — pvt,  Capt  Daniel  Emerson,  Col  Hercules  Mooney;  enl 
July  16,  79,  dis  Jan  14,  80.  JOHN  (Cockermouth,  Hillsborough  County), 
pvt,  age  19,  must'd  in  the  New  Levies  by  Major  William  Scott. 
JOHN — 6  months'  man;  "issued  to  him  at  West  Point  in  July,  1780,  \ 
pint  of  Rum  and  1  lb  sugar  by  Joseph  Bass,  commissary." 


RE  J  r0L  I TTIONA  R  Y  \  I  rA  R  HL  TBBA  RD  PA  TRIO  TS.       l2-j 

JONATHAN— pvt,  Capt  William  Walker's  5th  Militia  regt;  raised 
in  Dec,  76;  "paid  him  ^5,  2s." 

JOwSEPH — promoted  corporal  Apl  1,  80,  in  Capt  David  McGregor's 
Co,  Col  Alex  Scammell's  regt;  enl  for  the  war.  JOSEPH — sergt,  Capt 
Abel  Walker,  Col  Benj.  Bellows;  at  Ticonderoga  in  May,  77,  dis  June 

17,  77- 

JONAS  (Cockermouth) — pvt,  Capt  House,  Col  Joseph  Cilley;  on  fur- 
lough (wounded)  Jan  10,  78. 

LEMUEL — ensign,  Capt  Oliver  Ashley,  Col  Benj.  Bellows;  also  with 
Capt  Samuel  Wetherbee,  Col  Isaac  Wyman. 

PAUL  [possibly  a  Canadian  "  Hubbard  "] — pvt,  Capt  Laurens  Olivies, 
Col  Moses  Hazen. 

PIERRE  [possibly  a  Canadian  "  Hubbard "]—  pvt,  Capt  Antoine 
Paulint's  Independent  Company,  annexed  to  Col  Moses  Hazen's  regt 
[Sept  13,  1778J. 

RICHARD— Lt,  Capt  Abraham  French,  Col  Joshua  Wingate's  "  Re- 
turn of  Troops  "  defending  Piscataqua  Harbor  in  Nov,  75. 

ROSWELL— pvt,  Capt  Abel  Walker,  Col  Benj.  Bellows;  at  Ticon- 
deroga. 

THOMAS — Adjutant  of  Bedel's  New  Hampshire  Rangers  from  Jan- 
uary 22  to  October,  76. 

Captain  HUBBARD — in  Col  Alexander  Scammell's  regt. 

CONNECTICUT. 

AARON  (Glastonbury) — sergt;  Lexington  Alarm  List;  4  days  service. 

ABEL — pvt,  Capt  Samuel  Wyllys,  Col  Joseph  Spencer;  enl  May  8, 
75,  dis  Jan  18,  76.  ABEL — drummer,  Capt  Abijah  Savage,  Col  Henry 
Sherburne;  enl  Mch  20,  77,  dis  Mch,  80;  also,  Capt  Hezekiah  Welles, 
Col  Erastus  Wolcott;  also,  Capt  Gad  Stanley,  Col  Fisher  Gay. 

ABIJAH  (Middletown)— pvt,  corpl,  sergt;  Col  Elisha  Sheldon's  Light 
Dragoons;  enl  Mch  19,  77,  dis  Nov  1,  80;  pensioner. 

ABNER  (Middletown) — sergt-major,  Capt  Robert  Warner,  Col  John 
Durkee;  paid  from  Jan  1,  81,  to  Dec  31,  81;  pensioner. 

BENJAMIN— pvt,  Capt  David  Parsons,  Col  Charles  Webb;  enl  Apl 
26,  77,  died  Mch  31,  78.  BENJAMIN— pvt,  Capt  Eliphalet  Holmes, 
Col  Samuel  Selden. 

CALEB — clerk,  Major  John  Skinner's  Light  Horse;  marched  June 
10,  76,  dis  Aug  3,  76. 

DANIEL— qm-sergt,  Capt  Lathrop  Allen,  Col  Samuel  Elmore;  appt'd 
Apl  16,  76.  DANIEL  (Windham)— pvt,  Capt  John  Kingsley;  Lexing- 
ton Alarm  list,  4  days  service.  DANIEL — Capt  Martin  Kirtland,  Col 
Erastus  Wolcott. 


I28  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

DAVID  (Glastonbury) — pvt,  Capt  Jonathan  Hale,  Col  Erastus  Wol- 
cott;  at  siege  of  Boston.  DAVID — "  In  Militia  under  General  Gates  to 
the  Northward,  77;"  pensioner  [$25  per  month  from  1831  until  death]. 

ELIHU  (Middletown)— 1st  Lt.  8th  Conn,  from  July  6  to  Dec  10,  75; 
Capt  from  Jan  1  to  Dec  31,  76,  in  Cont  Infty,  Col  Jedediah  Huntington. 
ELIHU  (Chatham)— pvt,  Lt  William  Colfax,  Maj  Caleb  Gibbs;  died  in 
1777. 

ELIJAH— pvt,  Capt  Jonathan  Hale,  Col  Erastus  Wolcott;  6  weeks 
about  Boston  in  Jan  and  Feb,  76.  ELIJAH  (Middletown)— appt'd  May, 
77;  commissary  and  superintendent  stores;  served  from  77  to  83;  ad- 
mitted member  Society  Cincinnati  July  4,  1787. 

ELISHA— pvt,  Capt  Samuel  Granger,  Col  Charles  Webb;  enl  May 
24,  77,  for  war;  dis  Sep  15,  83.  ELISHA  (Middletown)— Capt  Jonathan 
Johnson,  Col  Philip  Burr  Bradley;  enl  June  17,  76,  dis  Nov  16,  76; 
prisoner  at  Ft.  Washington,  N.  Y.;  pensioner. 

ELIPHALET — pvt,  Capt  Hezekiah  Parsons,  Col  Benjamin  Hinman; 
enl  May  11,  75,  dis  Dec  19,  75;  at  siege  of  Boston.  ELIPHALET — 
pvt,  Capt  Zalmon  Read,  Col  David  Waterbury;  dis  Nov  28,  75.  ELI- 
PHALET—pvt,  Capt  Jared  Shepherd,  Col  Thomas  Belden;  marched 
Mch  28,  77,  dis  May  19,  77. 

ELIZUR  (Glastonbury) — pvt,  Lexington  Alarm  List,  4  days  service. 
ELIZUR — Lt,  Capt  John  Douglass,  Col  Jedediah  Huntington;  com'd 
Jiily  6,  75,  dis  Dec  10,  75;  re-entered  in  76.  ELIZUR — corpl,  Capt 
Elijah  Wright,  Col  Roger  Enos;  3  mos  service  in  78  on  Hudson. 
ELIZUR — Captain;  at  Tryon's  Invasion  in  Conn,  in  79. 

ELNATHAN  (Farmington)— corpl,  Capt  Selah  Heart,  Col  Erastus 
Wolcott;  at  siege  of  Boston.  ELNATHAN— ensign,  Capt  Asa  Bray, 
Col  Roger  Enos;  engaged  3  mos;  arrived  in  camp  June  22,  78. 

FREDERICK— pvt,  Capt  James  Chapman,  Col  Samuel  Holden  Par- 
sons; enl  May  6,  75,  dis  Dec  10,  75. 

GEORGE— pvt,  Capt  Oliver  Hanchett,  Col  Benedict  Arnold;  in  as- 
sault on  Quebec;  died  Jan,  76.  GEORGE  (Tolland)— ensign  from  June 
20  to  December,  76;  Capt  Jonathan  Birge,  Col  Comfort  Sage;  Lt,  Second 
Conn.  Line,  com'd  Jan  1,  77,  resigned  Dec  29,  77.  GEORGE — Captain, 
Col  Comfort  Sage;  at  Tryon's  Invasion  in  79.  GEORGE— mus'n,  Capt 
Ichabod  Hinckley,  Col  Charles  Webb;  enl  Feb  8,  77,  for  the  war;  appt'd 
drummer  Dec  1,  78,  reduced  Jan  1,  78;  joined  Parker's  Co  July  1,  78. 
GEORGE— corpl,  Capt  Stephen  Betts,  Col  Samuel  B.  Webb;  paid  from 
Jan  1,  81,  to  Dec  1,  81;  pensioner,  residing  in  New  Hampshire. 
GEORGE— pvt,  Capt  Selah  Heart,  Col  Erastus  Wolcott;  at  siege  of 
Boston  [see  also  "Jorge."] 

HENRY— pvt,  Capt  David  Hait,  Lt  Col  John  Mead. 


REVOLUTIONARY  WAR  HUBBARD  PATRIOTS.       12g 

HEZEKIAH — sergt,  Captains  Return  Jonathan  Meigs  and  Ebenezer 
Sumner,  Col  Joseph  Spencer;  enl  May  5,  75,  dis  Dec  10,  75;  at  siege 
of  Boston;  re-entered  continental  service  as  ensign  Jan   1   to  Dec  31, 

76,  under  Col  Samuel  Wyllys'  22d  Cont  Infty;  com'd  2d  Lt  3d  regt 
Conn  Line  Jan  1,  77;  promoted  1st  Lt  July  1,  79;  in  Capt  Robert  "War- 
ner's Co,  Col  John  Durkee's  regt;  served  to  end  of  war;  member  Society 
Cincinnati. 

JAMES — pvt,  Capt  John  Yeates,  Col  Roger  Enos;  arrived  in  camp 
on  Hudson  June  25,  78.  JAMES — pvt,  Capt  John  St.  John,  Col  Heman 
Swift;  paid  from  Feb  5,  81,  to  Dec  31,  81. 

JOAB — pvt,  Capt  Abraham  Sedgwick,  Col  John  Chester;  died  Sept 
26,  76. 

JOB — pvt,  Capt  Hezekiah  Parsons,  Col  Israel  Putnam;  enl  May  11, 
75,  dis  Dec  19,  75. 

JEDEDIAH— pvt,  Capt  Samuel  Eels,  Col  Comfort  Sage. 

JEREMIAH— Lieut,  Capt  Jared  Shepherd,  Col  Thomas  Belden; 
mchd  Mch  30,  77,  dis  May  19,  77.  JEREMIAH — ensign,  took  oath  of 
allegiance  and  freeman's  oath  at  Haddam,  Ct.,  in  September,  1777. 

JOEL — pvt,  Capt  James  Arnold,  Col  David  Wooster;  dis  in  Northern 
Dept  Nov  25,  75.  JOEL — pvt,  Capt  Nathaniel  Higgins,  Col  William 
Douglas. 

JOHN — ensign,  Capt  Noah  Fowler,  Lexington  Alarm  List,  5  days' 
service.  JOHN  (Middletown) — pvt,  Capt  Return  Jonathan  Meigs,  Col 
Joseph  Spencer;  enl  May  5,  75,  dis  Dec  19,  75.  JOHN — pvt,  Capt 
Theodore  Woodbridge,  Col  Samuel  Elmore;  enl  June  6,  76,  dis  Jan  7, 

77.  JOHN — pvt,  Col  Charles  Webb's  regt;  enl  May  29,  77,  for  war; 
taken  prisoner  June  30,  77.  JOHN — sergt,  Capt  Jonathan  Johnson, 
Col  Philip  Burr  Bradley;  enl  Aug  10,  76,  dis  Dec  25,  76.  JOHN — fifer, 
Capt  Joseph  Abbott;  at  New  York  in  76.  JOHN — corpl,  Capt  Jared 
Shepherd,  Col  Thomas  Belden;  mchd  Mch  28,  77,  dis  May  19,  77. 
JOHN — corpl,  Lieut  Charles  Seymour,  Col  Thomas  Belden;  joined 
April  21,  77,  dis  June  6,  77. 

JONAS — pvt,  Capt  Titus  Watson,  Col  Heman  Swift;  enl  May  29,  77. 
JONAS — pvt,  Capt  Elijah  Chapman,  Col  Heman  Swift;  paid  from  Jan 
1,  81,  to  Dec  31,  81.  JONAS  (Norfolk)— pvt,  Capt  Timothy  Taylor, 
Col  Heman  Swift;  enl  Jan  25,  79,  for  war;  pensioner,  residing  in  Ver- 
mont in  1818. 

JONATHAN— Com'd  Lieut  Jan  1,  77,  in  Lt.  Col  Philip  Burr's  regt; 
resigned  Jan  3,  78.  JONATHAN— pvt,  Col  Zebulon  Butler's  regt; 
paid  from  Jan  1,  81,  to  Dec  31,  81. 

JORGE  (George  ?) — pvt,  Capt  Jonathan  Burge,  Col  Comfort  Sage; 
regt  raised  June,  76;  time  expired  Dec  25,  76. 


I  ^o 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


JOSEPH— pvt,  Capt  Samuel  Whiting,  Col  David  Waterbury;  enl 
May  8,  76,  dis  Nov  17,  75;  re-entered.  JOSEPH— fifer,  Capt  Ebenezer 
Webb,  Col  Charles  Webb;  enl  July  12,  75,  dis  Dec  24,  75.  JOSEPH— 
pvt,  Capt  Robert  Watkins,  Col  Samuel  Elmore;  enl  Apl  16,  76;  re- 
engaged with  Capt  Hannson  Jan  1,77.  JOSEPH— 2d  mate  Conn  State 
Man-of-War,  Oliver  Cromwell;  paid  to  Mch  16,  1778. 

JOSIAH  (Glastonbury)— pvt,  Lexington  Alarm  List;  4  days  service 
in  Capt  Elizur  Hubbard's  Co.  JOSIAH— pvt,  Capt  John  Douglas,  Col 
Jed  Huntington;  enl  July  10,  75,  dis  Dec  18,  75;  at  New  York  in  76; 
sick  in  Hospital  at  Stamford  Nov,  76;  pensioner. 

JOSHUA— pvt,  Col  Elisha  Sheldon's  Lt  Dragoons,  6th  Troop;  enl 
May  2,  77,  at  Boston;  occupation,  sailor. 

MENOAH— pvt,  Capt  William  Moulton;  3d  Regt  Levies;  hired  by 
Glastonbury,  Sept  5,  80,  dis  Dec  4,  80. 

MOSES— pvt,  Capt  Martin  Kirtland,  Col  Erastus  Wolcott;  at  New 
London  Feb  28,  77. 

NEHEMIAH — Lieutenant  and  Paymaster  of  Burrall's  Conn  State 
Regt  from  July  31,  76,  to  Jan,  77;  Quartermaster  and  Deputy  Quarter- 
master-General from  78  to  82;  admitted  Society  Cincinnati  July  4,  1787; 
pensioner. 

OLIVER — ensign,  Capt  Edward  Eels,  Col  Comfort  Sage;  battalion 
raised  in  June,  76;  in  service  in  Dec,  76. 

PHILIP— pvt,  Capt  St.  John,  Col  Heman  Swift;  paid  from  Jan  t,  81, 
to  Dec  31,  81.  PHILIP— Capt  Elijah  Abel,  Col  Philip  Burr  Bradley; 
enl  June  21,  76,  dis  Dec  23,  76.  PHILIP  (Fairfield)— Capt  David 
Humphreys,  Col  Heman  Swift;  enl  Jan  1,  81,  for  3  years. 

REUBEN — pvt,  Capt  Samuel  Wyllys,  Col  Joseph  Spencer;  enl  May 
8,  75,  dis  Jan  18,  76. 

ROSWELL  (Middletown)— pvt,  Capt  Abijah  Savage,  Col  Henry 
Sherburne;  enl  May  21,  77,  dis  in  Spring  of  80. 

SAMUEL — pvt,  in  Col  Charles  Webb's  Regt  of  Levies;  enl  Aug  28, 
79,  dis  Jan  15,  80.  SAMUEL— Captain,  in  7th  Conn  Militia;  in  Tryon's 
Invasion  of  Conn,  July,  79. 

SELAH— corpl,  Capt  Joel  Clark,  Col  Jed  Huntington;  enl  July  10, 
75,  dis  Dec  18,  75.  SELAH  (Middletown)— pvt,  Capt  Abijah  Savage, 
Col  Henry  Sherburne;  enl  May  22,  77,  dis  in  Spring  of  80. 

TENES— pvt,  Capt  Return  Jonathan  Meigs,  Col  Joseph  Spencer; 
enl  May  9,  75,  dis  Oct  22,  75. 

TIMOTHY— pvt,  detached  from  Col  Wyllys'  regt;  taken  prisoner  at 
surrender  of  Ft  Washington,  N.  Y.,  Nov  16,  76.  TIMOTHY  (East 
Haddam) — pvt,  Lexington  Alarm  List;  18  days  service  in  Capt  John 
Willey's  Co.     TIMOTHY— pvt,  Capt  Joel  Clark,  Col  Jed  Huntington; 


REVOLUTIONARY  WAR  HUBBARD  PATRIOTS.       I3I 

enl  July  12,  75,  dis  Dec  18,  75.  TIMOTHY— pvt,  Capt  Joseph  Jewett, 
Col  Jed  Huntington;  enl  July  20,  75,  dis  Dec  10,  75.  TIMOTHY  (Mid- 
dletown) — pvt,  Capt  Abijah  Savage,  Col  Henry  Sherburne;  enl  May  2, 
77,  dis  in  Spring  of  80.  TIMOTHY— pvt,  Capt  Selah  Heart,  Col 
Erastus  Wolcott.  TIMOTHY— pvt,  Capt  Edward  Eels,  Col  Comfort 
Sage.  [One  of  these  was  a  "pensioner,  residing  in  New  Hampshire."] 
TITUS— pvt,  Capt  Charles  Whiting,  Col  Samuel  B.  Webb;  enl  May 

22,  77,  dis  Apl  22,  So;  pensioner. 

THOMAS  (Glastonbury)— Capt  Samuel  Granger,  Brig-Gen.  David 
Waterbury's  State  Brigade;  joined  July  10,  1781;  pensioner.  THOMAS 
(Chatham) — sergt,  missing;  supposed  to  have  died  at  Bunker  Hill. 

WILLIAM — pvt,  Capt  John  Douglas,  Col  Jed  Huntington;  enl  July 

17,  75,  dis  Dec  16,  75.  WILLIAM — pvt,  Capt  Joseph  Abbott,  nth  Conn 
Militia. 

ZEBULON  (Windham)— pvt,  Capt  John  Kingsley;  Lexington  Alarm 
List. 

ZENAS— pvt,  Capt  Hezekiah  Welles,  Col  Erastus  Wolcott. 

There  were  also  soldiers  by  the  name  of  David,  Henry,  James  and  Mills  "  Hubby  "  in  this  War  fr<  mi 
Connecticut.    [Possibly  they  were  "  Hubbards."] 

MASSACHUSETTS. 

The  following  war  services  from  the  banner  State  of  Freedom  were  copied  from  the  United 
States  Pension  Office  Records,  Washington,  D.  C,  and  the  Massachusetts  Archives,  Boston,  Mass. 
Maine  being  until  1820  a  part  of  Massachusetts,  her  soldiers  will  herein  be  found.  The  names  of 
strictly-spelled  "Hobart"  soldiers  (who  hailed  principally  from  Hingham,  Braintree,  and  Abington) 
are  as  follows,  their  services  being  not  narrated  among  the  "Hubbards"  :  Aaron,  Aaron  Jr,  Ben- 
jamin, Caleb,  Caleb  Jr,  Daniel,  Daniel  Jr,  Edmund,  Eli,  Elijah.  Hawkes.  Humphrey,  Isaac,  Israel, 
James,  Japhet,  Jeremiah.  John,  John  Jr,  John  2d,  Jonathan,  Joseph,  Joshua,  Josiah,  Nathaniel.  Na- 
thaniel Jr,  Nehemiah,  Noah,  Peter,  Samuel,  Seth,  Shebuel,  Shelewell,  Simon,  Stephen  and  William. 

AARON — pvt,  Cont.  Line,  Col  Michael  Jackson,  enl  July  1 1,  So,  dis  Dec 

18,  80.  AARON  (Berwick,  Me.)— pvt,  Capt  Philip  Hubbard,  Col  James 
Scammon,  enl  May  8,  75,  served  8  mos  about  Boston.  AARON  (Abing- 
ton)—must'd  at  Camp  Totoway  Oct  25,  80,  for  6  mos;  age  17,  5  ft  7  in, 
It  compl.  AARON  2d  (Abington)— In  Cont.  Army  in  So.  AARON— 
sergt,  Capt  Sam'l  Grant,  Col  [Ebenezer  ?]  Storer,  enl  Aug  14, 77,  dis  Oct 

23,  77;  served  in  Northern  Army. 

ABEL — pvt,  Cont  Line,  Capt  [Benj  ?]  Heywood,  Col  Thomas  Nixon, 
enl  July  12,  80,  corpl  Aug  24,  80,  dis  Jan  12,  81,  U  West  Point.  ABEL 
(Holden)— pvt,  Capt  Sam'l  Thompson,  Col  [Sam'l  ?]  Denny,  also  Col 
[Walter  ?]  Dean,  enl  Sep  26,  77,  dis  Oct  18,  77;  re-enl  Sep  22,  78,  for  ser- 
vice at  Dorchester,  Capt  March  Chase,  Col  Nathan  Sparhawk,  dis  Dec 
12,  78;  re-enl  Oct  21,  79,  Capt  Francis  Wilson,  Col  Sam  Denny,  dis  Nov 
23,  79;  must'd  in  Cont  Army  at  Camp  Totoway  Oct  25,  80;  age  19, 
5    ft    7    in,    dk   compl.     ABEL — drummer,    Capt    Abijah    Savage,   Col 


I  X2 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGV 


Henry  Sherburne,  enl  Mch  20,  77,  for  Rhode  Island  service,  dis  (?)  Aug 

21,  78. 

ABIJAH  (Otis,  Berkshire  Co)— fifer,  Capt  John  King,  Col  Hopkins, 
enl  July  15,  76,  dis  Aug  5,  76;  also  Lieut  Nath'l  Wood's  Co,  Lexington 
Alarm,  8  day's,  also  under  Capt  [Daniel  ?]  Whiting,  Col  Sam'l  Brewer; 
served  8  mos  about  Boston,  re-enl  Aug-  20,  77,  Capt  Daniel  Sackett,  Col 
[Christopher,  Benj  R.  ?]  Woodbridge,  dis  Nov  29,  77.  ABIJAH— pvt, 
Capt  Wm  Cannon,  Col  David  Leonard,  enl  May  6,  77,  dis  July  14,  77;  at 
Ticonderoga,  roll  dated  at  Blanford. 

ABNER  (Westfield)— Capt  John  Kellogg,  joined  Capt  Libbeus  Ball, 
Col  Wm  Shepard,  enl  Dec  4,  76,  deserted  Dec  6,  77;  re-enl  with  Capt 
Geo  Webb,  Jan  1,  77;  at  Providence,  Sept  5,  78,  and  May  5,  79;  in  ser- 
vice Jan  1,81,  and  Feb,  82;  reported  sick  in  Virginia  Dec,  81. 

ALLEN  (Marblehead)— pvt,  Capt  John  Merritt,  Col  John  Glover,  enl 
May  30,  75;  served  8  mos  about  Boston. 

AMOS— seaman  on  brigantine  "  Massachusetts,"  Capt  John  Fiske 
(afterward  General),  enl  Feb  17,  77,  dis  July  31,  77;  (crew  raised  prin- 
cipally about  Salem).  AMOS  (Marblehead)— pvt,  Capt  Selman,  Col 
[John  ?]  Glover,  enl  June,  75;  served  8  mos  about  Boston,  also  in  service 
at  Marblehead  in  83  under  Capt  Fettiplace. 

AM ASE  (Marblehead— same  service  as  "Amos"  of  Marblehead)— 

(ibid?). 

ATTAI  (Holden)— Capt  Geo  Webb,  also  Capt  Paul  Raymond,  Lex- 
ington Alarm,  8£  days;  died  in  service. 

BAILEY  (Mt  Washington,  Berkshire  Co)— Capt  John  King,  Col  John 
Ashley,  enl  June  27,  80,  dis  July  1,  80;  West  Point  Alarm,  Capt  John 
Spoor,  Col  John  Brown,  3  mos  service,  enl  July  18,  80,  dis  Oct  23,  80. 

BARTHOLOMEW— pvt,  Capt  Thomas  Cushing;  did  garrison  duty 
at  the  "Castle  "  July  25  to  Oct  24,  84. 

BENJAMIN  (Leicester)— Capt  [Benj  ?]  Frothingham,  Crane's  Artil- 
lery, enl  July,  80,  dis  Sep  15,  80;  age  17,  5  ft  10  in,  dk  compl.  BEN- 
JAMIN—Capt  Sam  Healy,  Col  John  Jacobs  Lt  Inf  Co.  in  Rhode  Island 
Alarm,  enl  Sep  24,  79,  dis  Nov  23,  79.  BENJAMIN— Col  Timothy  Big- 
elow,  enl  July  5,  80,  dis  Dec  15,  80.  BENJAMIN— Capt  Josiah  White, 
i  Col  Job  Cushing,  to  re-enforce  Northern  Army  under  Gen  Gates;  enl 
Sep  5,  77,  dis  Nov  29,  77.  BENJAMIN— Capt  Joseph  McNall  (Mc- 
Neill?), Lt  Col  Sam'l  Pierce,  Rhode  Island  service,  enl  May  17,  79,  dis 
July  1,  79.  BENJAMIN  (Granby)— pvt  Capt  Reuben  Dickinson,  Col 
Ruggles  Woodbridge;  allowed  traveling  expenses  to  and  from  Ticon- 
deroga in  76. 

CALEB— sergt,  Capt  Joseph  Starrow,  Col  David  Wells,  enl  Sep  24, 
77,  dis  Oct  18,  77;  marched  northward,  roll  dated  at  Leverett.     CALEB 


REVOLUTIONARY  WAR  HUBBARD  PATRIOTS.       I33 

(Pepperell) — Capt  Thomas  Warren,  Col  [John,  Eleazer  ?]  Brook,  served 
at  White  Plains  in  76,  also  Lexington  Alarm,  Capt  John  Sawtelle,  Col 
James  Prescott.  CALEB  (Sunderland) — Capt  Noadiah  Leonard,  Col 
[Christopher,  Benj  R.?]  Woodbridge,  enl  Apl  27,  75,  for  8  mos. 
CALEB — Capt  Agrippa  Wells,  Col  Sam  Brewer,  at  Ticonderoga;  from 
Sep  1,  76,  served  3  mos. 

CHARLES  HOBBY— paymaster  16th  Cont.  Inf.  Sept  13,  76;  killed 
at  Montressor's  Island,  N.  Y.,  Sept  23,  76. 

CLARK — Capt  Reuben  Dickinson,  Col  [Elisha?]  Porter,  served  1  yr, 
2  mos,  1  week,  no  date;  (?)  also  served  from  Sept  23,  77,  to  Oct  24,  77. 

DANIEL  (Pittsfield,  Berkshire  Co)— Capt  Wm  Francisco  and  Capt 
John  Strong,  marched  from  Pittsfield  to  Kinderhook  May  4  to  May  11, 
77,  and  from  Pittsfield  to  Ft  Edward  July  8,  77,  disch  Aug  26,  77. 
DANIEL — Capt  Sam'l  Grant,  Col  [Ebenezer  ?]  Storer,  enl  for  Northern 
Army  Aug  14,  77,  clis  Oct  23,  77.  DANIEL — Capt  Joseph  Boynton, 
Col  Nathan  Sparhawk,  enl  Aug  21,  77,  dis  Aug  26,  77,  at  Bennington 
Alarm.  DANIEL*  (Leicester) — corpl,  Capt  Seth  Washburne,  Col 
I  Sam'l,  Jonathan  ?]  Ward,  mchd  Apl  19,  75,  enl  Apl  26,  75,  on  "coat 
rolls"  Oct  8,  75,  served  8  mos  about  Boston.  DANIEL  (Berwick, 
Me) — Capt  Philip  Hubbard,  Col  James  Scammon,  enl  May  5,  75,  served 
8  mos  about  Boston.  DANIEL  (Pittsfield  ?)'— com 'd  1st  Lt  July  6,  78, 
in  6th  Hampshire  (now  Berkshire)  county  regt,  2d  Co.  DANIEL 
(Warwick) — 1st  Lieut,  Capt  Caleb  Montague,  Lt  Col  Sam'l  Williams; 
enl  May  10,  76;  in  service  Dec  30,  78.  DANIEL — pvt,  Capt  [Jonas?] 
Hubbard's  Worcester  Co.  Militia;  no  date.  DANIEL  (Wilbraham) — 
at  Camp  Totoway  Oct  25,  So;  enl  for  6  mos. 

DAYID  (Ackworth) — drummer,  Capt  Jeremiah  Stiles,  Col  Paul  D. 
Sargent;  enl  May  15,  75,  served  2  mos,  22  days  about  Boston.  DAYID 
(Concord) — corpl,  Capt  Charles  Miles,  Col  Jonathan  Reed,  at  Ticon- 
deroga; also  Lieut  Ephraim  Wheeler,  Col  Eleazer  Brook;  enl  Mch  4, 
76,  dis  Mch  10,  76;  mchd  to  Roxbury  for  defence  of  Boston;  at  evacua- 
tion of  Boston.  DAYID  (Granville) — pvt,  Capt  Caleb  Keep  (also  Lieut 
John  Wright),  Col  Wm  Shepard;  enl  Apl  1,  77,  dis  Aug  30,  78.  DAYID 
(Somers,  Ct) — Capt  Charles  Dibble,  Col  John  Patterson,  on  "  coat  rolls  " 
in  75,  probably  served  8  mos  about  Boston.  DAYID  (Springfield) — 
Capt  Moses  Ashley,  Col  Joseph  Yose,  mchd  to  join  Cont.  Army;  enl  July 
18,  80,  for  6  mos,  dis  Dec  8,  80;  age  25,  5  ft  9  in,  lt  compl.  DAYID 
(Stockbridge,  Berkshire  Co) — pvt,  Capt  Wm  Goodrich,  Cob  John  Pater- 
son;  mchd  Apl  22,  75,  to  Cambridge  on  Lexington  Alarm.  DAYID 
(Otis,  Berkshire  Co) — no  data.     DAYID  (Wilbraham) — must'dby  Brig- 

*  History  of  Leicester  says  he  wore  a  braided  cue,  which  was  severed  by  an  enemy's  bullet  at 
Bunker  Hill,  and  the  skin  grazed. 


!34  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Gen  John  Paterson  for  6  mos  service  Oct  25,  1780,  at  Camp  Totoway 
DAVID  (London) — pvt,  served  27  days  in  Lexington  Alarm;  mchd  Apl 
21  in  Lieut  Nath'l  Woods'  Co,  also  Capt  Wm  Goodrich,  Col  John  Pater- 
son; enl  May  5,  75,  served  8  mos  about  Boston.  DAVID  (of  Con- 
cord?)— corpl,  Capt  John  Buttrick,  Col  Jonathan  Reed;  enl  Sep  28,  77, 
dis  Nov  7,77,  mchd  northward;  detached  from  Col  Brook's  regt  to  re- 
enforce  Gen  Gates;  at  capture  of  Burgoyne.  DAVID — on  roll  dated 
May  27,  77,  vSpringfield,  Capt  Dan'l  Caldwell,  Col  Timothy  Robinson; 
at  Ticonderoga  Feb  24,  77;  enl  Dec  25,  76,  dis  Feb  24,  77,  also  dis  Apl 

2,  77- 

DIMON,  also  DIMION  (Wells)— Capt  James  Hubbard,  Col  Ephraim 

Doolittle;  served  8  mos  about  Boston;  on  roll  dated  Dec  15,  75. 

EBEN— on  ship  Planter  Dec  11,  83;  Capt  John  F.  Williams. 

EBENEZER  (same  as  Eben?) — on  ship  Protector,  Capt  John  F. 
Williams;  enl  Oct  15,  80;  deserted  May  12,  81,  as  voyager.  EBEN- 
EZER (Granville) — enl  Jan  11  or  16,  81,  for  3  yrs;  25  yrs,  5  ft,  6  in, 
dkcompl,  dk  hair,  farmer.  EBENEZER  JR— enl  in  Cont.  Army  for 
3  yrs;  granted  bounty  Jan  11,  91.  EBENEZER— Capt  Wm  Cooley, 
Col  John  Mosley;  enl  July  9,  dis  Aug  12,  77;  also  in  10th  Hampshire 
regt;  mchd  to  re-enforce  Northern  Army;  also  at  North  Castle;  enl  Sep 
23,  76,  dis  Nov  16,  76. 

ELI — pvt,  CaptSam'l  Wolcott,  Col  Hopkins;  enl  July  16,  76,  dis  Aug 
5,  76;  mchd  to  Highlands,  N.  Y.;  roll  sworn  to  in  Berkshire  Co. 

ELIHU — Capt  John  Thompson,  Col  Leonard;  enl  May  7,  77,  dis  July 
8,  77;  in  Hampshire  County  regt,  mchd  to  re-enforce  Northern  Army. 
ELIHU — Capt  Ebenezer  Merry,  Col  Hyde;  enl  Oct  30,  81,  dis  Nov  5, 
81;  mchd  westward  under  Major  Oliver  Root.  ELIHU — corpl,  Capt 
Reuben  Dickinson,  Col  Porter;  on  roll  dated  Nov  9,  78,  sea  coast  de- 
fense. ELIHU  (Amherst) — 5  days  service  Lexington  Alarm,  under  Lt 
Noah  Dickenson. 

ELIJAH  (Montague?) — Capt  Moses  Harvey,  Col  David  Wells;  enl 
May  10,  77,  dis  July  10,  77.  ELIJAH — Capt  Elihu  Lyman,  Col  Elisha 
Porter,  Hampshire  County  regt,  enl  July  25,  79,  dis  Aug  11,  79;  served 
at  New  London,  Ct. 

ELISHA — sergt,  Capt  Jesse  Stone,  Col  Job  Cushing;  enl  July  27,  77, 
dis  Aug  29,  77;  at  Bennington.  ELISHA — sergt,  Capt  Aaron  Graves, 
Col  Leonard,  enl  May  8,  77,  dis  July  8,  77;  mchd  northward  in  77. 
ELISHA  (New  Ipswich) — Capt  Ezra  Towne,  Col  James  Read;  enl  Apl 
23,  75;  must'd  July  11,  75;  on  coat  rolls;  made  sergt;  born  Conn;  25  yrs, 
5  ft  9,  brown  compl,  blk  eyes,  farmer.  ELISHA — 2d  Lt,  3d  Co  1st 
Worcester  county  (Col  Denny)  regt;  com'd  Mch  5,  79;  2d  lA(ibid)\ 
com'd   Apl  28,   78  also.      ELISHA— Lt,    Capt   Joshua   Whitney,     Col 


REVOL UTIONAR  Y  WAR  HUBBARD  PA  TRIOTS.       135 

Tosiah  Whitnev,  enl  July  31,  78,  dis  Sep  14,  78;  in  Rhode  Island  service, 
roll  dated  at  Worcester.  ELISHA  (Holden)-sergt,  CaptSam'l  Thomp- 
son Col  Dean,  enl  Sep  26,  dis  Oct  18,  77;  Lexington  Alarm  io*  days 
under   Capt   James  Davis,    Col    Doolittle;  served    1   mo   in    Northern 

Armv. 

ELNATHAN  (Topsfield)— Capt  Robert  Dodge,  Col  Sam  1  Johnson; 
enl  Aug  15,  77,  dis   Dec   14,    77;  m   3d  regt  Mass  Militia,  stationed  at 

Peekskill. 

EPHR AIM— Capt  Phineas  Walker,  7th  Worcester   County  regt;  enl 

Oct  3,  79,  dis  Oct  20,  79,  at  Rutland. 

FRANCIS  (Boston)— drummer,  Capt  John  Wood,  Col  Paul  D.  Sar- 
gent, at  Cambridge,  and  on  coat  rolls  Nov  9,  75;  enl  in  Jul>">  8o>  for  6 

months. 

GEORGE— Capt  Selah  Heart,  Col  Wolcott;  receipt  for  2  mos  pay  in 
75  GEORGE  (Granville)— Capt  Libbeus  Ball,  Col  Ebenezer  Daniel- 
son,  Lexington  Alarm  9  days;  enl  Apl  29,  75,  and  served  3  mos,  10  days; 
at  Roxburv;  on  coat  rolls;  went  on  Quebec  expd'n  in  Oct,  75. 

HEARD  (Wells,  Me)— mustered  June  6,  80,  for  6  mos  for  defense  of 

eastern  part  of  State.  . 

HEROD  (Wells,  Me)— pvt,  Capt  Daniel  Clarke,  Col  Joseph  Prime, 
enl  June  10,  80,  disch  Nov  18,  80;  York  Co  regt  raised  for  defense  of 

pistcrn  co cist. 

HEZEKIAH— pvt,  Capt  Simon  Earned,  Col  William  Shepard;  enl 
July  10  80  dis  Dec  2,  80.  HEZEKIAH  (Groton)— Lexington  Alarm 
1 4  days  under  Capt  John  Sawtelle,  Col  James  Prescott.  HEZEKIAH 
(Granville)— enl  for  9  mos  in  79;  enl  in  Cont  Army  for  6  mos;  mend 
July  1  80  (July  10  ?),  dis  Dec  17,  80;  age  16,  5  ft  2  in,  ruddy  or  dk 
compl'  HEZEKIAH— Capt  John  Carpenter;  enl  Oct  3,  79,  dis  Jan  3, 
80;  on  guard  at  Springfield.  HEZEKIAH  (Rehoboth)— must'd  at  Camp 
Totoway  Oct  25,  80,  for  6  mos  service  in  Cont  Army. 

HOOKER  (Egremont,  Berkshire  Co)— 2d  Lt  nth  Co  1st  Berkshire 
Militia;  also  2d  Lt  12th  Co,  ibid,  Capt  Ephraim  Fitch;  com'd  June  8, 

1  HUMPHREY— Capt  Josiah  Jenkins,  Col  Sam'l  Brewer;  enl  Mch  16, 
77-  name  omitted  in  Sept,  77.  HUMPHREY  (Sheffield)  (^f)-Capt 
Sewall  Lt  Col  Sprout,  Cont  Army;  enl  Mch  16,  77,  deserted  July  7,  77- 
HUMPHREY  2d  (Sheffield,  negro)— enl  for  3  years;  in  service  Sep  10, 
81  •  a«-e  20  yrs,  5  ft  9  in,  laborer.  HUMPHREY-Capt  Haffield 
White,  Col  Rufus  Putnam;  enl  Jan  1,  81,  for  the  war;  at  West  Point 

M  ISAAC-clk  in  Capt  Reubin  Dickinson's  Co,  Col  (Elisha  ?)  Porter's 
regt;  on  roll  dated  Nov  9,  7«-     ISAAC-sergt,  Capt  Noah  Dickinson,  Col 


J 


6  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 


Elisha  Porter's  Hampshire  Co  regt;  mchd  to  New  Providence  Aug  iS, 
77,  dis  Aug  21,  77.  ISAAC — Concord  Minute-Man;  served  from  Apl 
19,  75,  to  Nov,  76.  ISAAC— pvt,  Lt  Col  Smith,  enl  July  23,  79,  dis  in 
Apl,  80.  ISAAC  (Granville)— Capt  (Nathan  ?)  Hamilton,  Col  Moseley's 
13th  regt;  enl  July  27,  79,  for  9  mos,  dis  Apl  27,  80;  age  19,  5  ft  6  in,  blk 
hair.  ISAAC — at  Cambridge  on  guard  duty.  ISAAC  (Pembroke) — 
Capt  Tom  Turner,  Col  John  Bailey;  in  service  Jan  10,  76.  ISAAC — 
Capt  Joseph  Starrow,  Col  David  Wells,  enl  Sep  23,  77,  dis  Oct  18,  77; 
roll  dated  at  Leverett;  mchd  on  expedition  northward. 

ISRAEL — Capt  Joseph  Harrow,  Col  David  Leonard;  enl  Feb  25,  77, 
dis  Apl  10,  77;  mchd  to  Ticonderoga.  ISRAEL — Capt;  appointed  to 
recruit  for  Hampshire  Co  for  men  to  go  to  Canada;  also  for  New  York 
and  Canada.  ISRAEL  (Sunderland)— pvt,  Capt  Noadiah  Leonard, 
Col  Ruggles  Woodbridge,  Lexington  Alarm;  served  17  days. 

JACOB— pvt,  Capt  Benj  Walcott,  Col  Tom  Marshall;  enl  June  19,  78, 
for  9  mos;  reported  dis  Mch  19,  79. 

JAMES  (Dracut)— Capt  Stephen  Russell,  Col  Joel  Green;  mchd  Apl 
19,  75,  against  ministerial  troops.  JAMES  (Pittsfield) — mchd  to  Albany 
Jan  14,  76,  under  Capt  Win  Francis,  order  Gen  Schuyler,  dis  Jan  19,  76; 
com'd  2d  Lieut  July  21,  76,  2d  Berkshire  Co,  Lt-Col  David  Rossiter;  at 
Ticonderoga  Dec  16,  76,  dis  Mch  16,  77;  went  to  Kinderhook  May  4,  77, 
Capt  John  Strong,  dis  May  11,  77;  also  in  Capt  Amos  Rathbone's  Co, 
Col  Benj  Simonds,  under  Brig-Gen  John  Fellows;  in  service  at  the 
Northward  at  Manchester  and  Bennington,  dis  July  27,  77;  also  served 
five  days  ending  Aug  23,  77.  JAMES  (Wells,  Me)— capt,  Col  Ephraim 
Doolittle's;  24th  Regt,  at  Winter  Hill  Oct  10,  75,  reed  order  for  bounty 
coat,  payable  lo  Lieut  Nath'l  Cousins.  JAMES,  JR  (Wells)— pvt,  at 
Winter  Hill  Oct  10,  75.     JAMES— pvt,  Capt  Tobias  Lord,  enl  Feb  29, 

76,  dis  May  31,  76;  stationed  at  Falmouth,  Me.  JAMES — pvt,  Capt 
David  Bent,  Col  Job  dishing,  enl  Sep  5,  77;  served  2  mos  25  days  and 
reported  furloughed.  JAMES — pvt,  Capt  Ebenezer  Sheldon,  Col  Seth 
Murray;  enl  July  14,  80,  dis  Oct  10,  80.  JAMES— pvt,  Capt  Jotham 
Houghton,  Col  Nathan  Sparhawk,  Gen  Warner's  Brigade;  enl  Nov  3, 
78,  dis  Nov  19,  78;  reinforced  guards  at  Rutland  under  Col  Jacob  Ger- 
rish,  escort  to  troops  of  Convention  to  Enfield,  Ct.  JAMES — pvt,  Capt 
Theophilus  Wilder,  Col  Benj  Gill;  enl  Aug  24,  77,  dis  Nov  29,  77,  13 
days'  travel  included. 

JAPHETH— pvt,  Capt  Jeremiah  Putnam,  Col  Nath'l  Wade;  enl  Jan 
1,  78,  for  12  mos;  at  North  Kingston  Nov  6,  78,  dis  Dec  31,  78. 
JAPHETH— pvt,  Capt  Theophilus  Wilder,  Col  Benj  Gill;  enl  Aug  24, 

77,  dis  Nov  29,  77,  13  days'  travel  included. 
TTEDIMAH  and  TEDIMIR— see  JUDD  IMER]. 


RE ] T0L UTIOA 'A RY  I VA R  HUBBA RD  PA  TRIO TS.       r  ,  - 

JEREMIAH  (New  Canaan)— Capt  Stephen  Pearl,  Col  B.  R.  Wood- 
bridge;  enl  May  10,  75,  served  2  mos  26  days;  in  service  at  Cambridge 
Oct  23,  75,  order  given  for  bounty  coat;  delivered  firelocks  Jan  2,  76. 
JEREMIAH  (Wells,  Me)— Capt  Sam'l  Leighton,  Col  [Williams?]  Fran- 
cis; traveled  to  Dorchester  in  Aug,  76;  in  service  Nov  5,  76;  on  picket 
duty  May  11,  75,  under  Major  L.  Baldwin. 

JO  (Suffolk  Co) — Capt  Pillsbury,  Col  Wigglesworth ;  on  return  made 
by  Xat  Barber,  Boston,  Apl  13,  77. 

JOEL  (Pepperell) — Capt  Henry  Haskell,  Col  James  Prescott;  on 
traveling  expedition,  roll  dated  Jan  13,  76,  Cambridge,  Mass.  JOEL 
(Rutland)— Capt  Win  Bent  (?).  JOEL— pvt,  Capt  Ephraim  Stearns, 
Col  John  Rand;  enl  July  10,  80,  dis  from  Worcester  Co  regt  Oct  10,  80. 
JOEL— pvt,  Lieut  Wm  Muzzey,  Col  Nathan  Sparhawk;  enl  July  5,  78, 
dis  July  15,  78;  served  under  Maj  Dan'l  Clap  at  Rutland  barracks,  roll 
dated  Nov  28,  78,  at  Hubbardston.  JOEL— Capt  Ezekiel  Knowlton, 
Col  Dyke;  allowed  gun  and  blanket  money  Nov  26,  76;  served  from 
Dec  18,  76,  to  Mch  1,  77.  JOEL— pvt,  Lieut  Benj  Mills,  Col  Jonathan 
Grout;  enl  Dec  21,  80,  dis  Jan  4,  80;  escort  for  exchange  of  prisoners 
from  Rutland  to  New  London  Dec  26,  80. 

JOHN  (Berkshire  Co)— 1st  Lieut,  Capt  Wm  Bacon,  Col  John  Fellows 
(afterward  Brig-Gen),  8th  Mass  Regt;  served  from  Apl  21,  75,  to  May 
7,  and  from  May  8,  to  Aug  1,  75;  in  camp  at  Roxbury  May  23,  75; 
present  on  "  coat-rolls  "  in  Oct,  75;  family  tradition  states  that  he  was 
wounded  in  the  knee  and  applied  for  a  pension.  [Presence  of  a  name 
on  "  coat-rolls  "  is  considered  equivalent  to  proof  of  eight  months'  ser- 
vice about  Boston  from  Apl,  75,  to  Jan,  76.  Every  man  received  a 
"coat."]  JOHN  (Berkshire  Co)— sergt,  Capt  Enoch  Noble,  Col  John 
Ashley;  enl  Aug  21,  77,  dis  Sep  20,  77;  re-enl  Aug  21,  77,  dis  Sept  21, 
77,  mchd  to  Manchester,  Vt,  thence  to  Allington,  thence  to  Stillwater. 
By  order  Gen  Lincoln  joined  Gen  John  Ashley's  Regt  and  mchd  to  Bot- 
tone  Rills.  JOHN  (Berkshire  Co)— pvt,  Capt  Elijah  Deming,  Col  Ash- 
Icy;  enl  July  8,  77,  dis  July  19,  77;  also  enl  Aug  16,  77,  dis  Aug  22,  77; 
Berkshire  Co  Regt  ordered  to  Fort  Edwards  by  Maj -Gen  Schuyler  and 
ordered  to  Bennington  by  Brig-Gen  John  Fellows.  JOHN  BOLTER 
(Brimfield) — pvt,  Col  Thomas  Nixon;  enl  July  10,  80;  must'd  Oct  25,  80, 
by  Brig-Gen  Patterson  at  Camp  Totoway  for  six  months'  service;  sick 
at  Fishkill;  dis  Nov  11,  So,  from  the  hospital;  age  '35,  height  5  ft  7  in, 
compl  ruddy;  also  served  under  Ensign  Bancroft  and  Capt  Mathew 
Chambers.  JOHN  (Brookfield  ?)— pvt,  Capt  Reuben  Slayton,  Col  Wm 
Shepard;  enl  Mch  u,  77;  at  Valley  Forge;  d  Apl  14,  78.  JOHN 
(Leicester) — pvt,  Capt  Luring  Lincoln,  also  Capt  Adam  Martin,  Col 
Timothy  Bigelow;  enl  Mch  10,  77,  for  the  war;  at  Boston  June   14,  81. 


0 


8  HUBBARD  BIS  TORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


JOHN,  J R  (Ludlow)— sergt,  on  Sergeant  Israel  Warriner's  Lexington 
Alarm  roll;  mchd  Apl  20,^75.     JOHN  (North  Brookfield)— Capt  Joseph 
Gilbert,  also  Capt  Packard,  Col  [Saml?]  Brewer;  enl  in   75   for  8  mos; 
on  coat-roll  dated  Oct  7,  75,  Roxbury;  in  service  in  77.     JOHN  (resi- 
dence Marlboro;  credited  to  Methuen)— pvt,  Capt  Fox,  Col  Henry  Jack- 
son; served  from  Sep  27,  77,  to  May  5,  79.     JOHN  (Wells,  Me)— fifer, 
Capt  Jesse  Dorman,  Col  James  Scammon;  enl  May  12,  75,  served  2  mos 
24  days.     JOHN  (Wells,  Me)— pvt,  Capt  Stephen  Titcomb,  Col  Tristram 
Jordan;  mchd  Apl  21,  75,  to  Lexington.     JOHN  (York,  Me)— 2d  Lieut, 
Capt  Isaias  Preble,  Col  Jacob  Gerrish;  served  3  mos  4  days  from  Apl 
2,  78.     JOHN  (York,  Me)— Com'd   1st  Lieut  in  2d  Co,  1st  Berwick,  Capt 
j'edediah  Goodwin,  2d  York  Co,  Apl  29,  76.     JOHN— fifer,  Capt  Tobias 
Lord;  enl  Feb  27,  76,  dis  Feb  29,  76;  stationed  at  Falmouth  for  sea  coast 
defence.     JOHN— pvt,  Capt  Michael  G.  Houdin,  Col   Rufus  Putnam; 
roll  dated  at  West  Point  Jan,  81,  shows  him  "sick  at  Leicester,"  also 
during  Feb  and  Mch.     JOHN— corpl,  Lieut  John  Wright,  Col  William 
Shepard;  enl  in  78  for  3  yrs.     JOHN— Capt  Isaac  Colton,  Col  Rufus 
Putnam  (late  D.  Brewer's  regt);  reed  order  for  bounty  coat  at  Roxbury 
Nov  15,  75,  payable  to   Lieut  Robart  Andrews.     JOHN  (Granville)— 
pvt,  Capt  Caleb  Keep,  Col  William  Shepard;  enl  Apl  1,  77,  corpl  Jan  1, 
78,  'dis  Apl  7,  80,  at  West  Point.     JOHN— pvt,  Capt  John  Wiley,  Col 
Michael  Jackson;  enl  May  1,  77,  deserted  in  79.     JOHN— Capt  Nathan 
Hamilton,  Col  Sam'l  Brewer;  on  pay-roll  of  Aug  3,  76;  also  of  Sep  30, 
76;  at  Ticonderoga  Mills  Nov  3.  76.     JOHN— Capt  Thomas  Vinson,  Col 
Sam'l  Gerrish  (regt  raised  in  Essex  and  Suffolk  counties);  enl  Oct  20,  79, 
dis  Nov  23,  79.     JOHN— pvt,  Capt  James  Berry,  Col  Thomas  Poor;  per- 
formed service  15  days  previous  to  Sep  1,  78.  JOHN— pvt,  Capt  John  Mor- 
gan; enl  Jan  15,  78,  dis  July  1,78;  detached  from  Hampshire  and  Worces- 
ter counties  to  guard  stores  and  magazines  at  Brookfield  and  Springfield. 
JOHN— pvt,  Lieut  Moses  Hubbard,  Col  John   Ashley  Jr,  Col  John  Fel- 
lows' Brigade,  raised  by  Brig-Gen  Stark;  performed  8   days'  service  in 
Oct,  81.     JOHN   B— matross,  Capt  Philip  Merritt's  5th  Co,  Col  Thomas 
Craft's  Artillery,  in  service  Jan  12.  78;  refused  Sep  22,  77,  to  leave  Bos- 
ton; reed  bounty  for  8  months'  service  from  Apl  30,  77,  to  Dec  30,  77; 
also  in  Jonathan  Stoddard's  Co.     JOHN— "certified  by  selectmen  of 
Truro  Sep  19,  77,  as  having  been  returned  from  the  British  ship  Dia- 
mond, Capt  Chas  Fielding,  to  be  exchanged  for  British  subjects;  cap- 
tured Sep  6,  77,  from  merchant  vessel  Morning  Star,  Capt  John  Combe 
of  Newburyport."     JOHN— seaman    on    the  brigantine  Freedom;  enl 
July  28,  76,  dis  Oct  21,  76. 

JONAH— pvt,  Capt  Joseph  Wadsworth,  Col  Gamiliel  Bradford;  enl 

June  16,  78,  dis  Mch  16,  79. 


REVOLUTIONARY  WAR  HUBBARD  PATRIOTS.       139 

JONAS*— ist  Lieut  on  Lexington  Alarm  roll,  Capt  Timothy  Bigelow, 
Col  Artemas  Ward;  com'd  Captain  and  enl  company  at  Worcester, 
Mass,  Apl  24,  75,  for  Lt-Col  Artemas  Ward's  Regt,  and  went  with  Col 
Benedict  Arnold's  expedition  through  Maine  to  Quebec;  wounded  in 
assault  Dec  31,  75;  refused  to  be  carried  from  the  field,  saying,  "  Boys, 
I  came  here  to  serve  with  you,  and  will  stay  here  to  die  with  you."  He  1 
died  following  day  from  wounds  received  and  severe  exposure  from 
lying  upon  snow  and  ice.  JONAS— pvt,  Capt  Caleb  Keep,  Col  Wm  Shep- 
ard;  enl  June  24,  79,  for  9  mos,  dis  Jan  1,  80;  "took  the  place  of  A. 
Sexon;  Hub'd  disch'd  Apl  29,  So  ;"  re-enl  for  3  yrs;  in  service  Apl  25, 
8j.  JONAS  (Granville)— Capt  Nathan  Hamilton,  Col  Moseley;  raised 
by  resolve  Apl  20,  78,  for  9  mos;  arrived  at  Fishkill  June  16,  78;  age  16, 
5ft  3  in,  elk  compl.  JONAS— pvt,  Capt  Levi  Ely,  Col  John  Brown; 
enl  Aug  9,  80,  reported  killed  Oct  19,  80. 

JONATHAN  (Berkshire  Co)— matross  under  Capt  Wm  Fellows, 
Brig-Gen  John  Fellows'  Brigade;  mchd  to  Kingsbury,  N.  Y.;  roll  dated 
at  Sheffield;  enl  July  9,  77,  dis  July  29,  77.  JONATHAN  (Brimfield) 
—pvt,  Capt  James  Sherman,  Col  Pyncheon;  marched  on  Lexington 
Alarm  Apl  19,  75.  JONATHAN  (Paxton)— pvt,  Capt  Phinehas  Moore, 
Col  Ephraim  Doolittle;  mchd  to  Cambridge  Apl  19,  75,  served  10  days. 
JONATHAN  (Shrewsbury)— Capt  Job  Cushing,  Col  Artemus  Ward; 
mchd  to  Cambridge  Apl  19,  75,  served  32  days.  JONATHAN  (Sun- 
derland)—pvt,  Col  Noadiah  Leonard,  Col  Ruggles  Woodbridge;  mchd 
on  Lexington  Alarm  Apl  19,  75,  served  14  days.  JONATHAN— sergt, 
Capt  John  Spoor,  Col  John  Ashley  Jr;  enl  Oct  12,  81,  dis  Oct  28,81; 
mchd  on  alarm  to  Barnes  Heaths  in  Stillwater. 

JOSEPH,  JR  (Berwick,  Me)— corpl,  Capt  Philip  Hubbard,  Col  James 
Scammon;  enl  May  5,  75,  served  3  mos  4  days;  in  service  Dec  21,  75; 
reed  bounty  coat.  JOSEPH  (Hingham)— fifer,  Capt  Israel  Davis,  also 
Capt  Daniel  Pillsbury,  also  Capt  Christ.  Woodbridge,  Col  Edward  Wig- 
glesworth;  enl  Mch  25,  77,  for  3  yrs;  at  Valley  Forge  June  2,  78,  and 
Camp  Greenwich  July  21,  78;  in  service  Feb  12,  80,  Capt  Woodbridge, 
Col  vSmith.  JOSEPH  (Hingham)— Capt  Stower's  Independent  Co;  in 
service  at  Hull  Mch  1,  77,  age  51.  JOSEPH  (Ludlow)— Capt  Paul 
Langdon;  mchd  from  Wilbraham  on  Lexington  Alarm  Apl  20,  75, 
served  14  days.  JOSEPH  (Sanford,  Me)— Capt  Daniel  Merrill,  also 
Capt  Dan'l  Morris,'  Col  Sam'l  Brewer,  must'd  by  Nath'l  Wells  at  Wells 
for  3  yrs;  in  service  from  Jan  1,  77;  reed  state  bounty;  in  Capt  Hitch- 
cock's Co,  Col  Sprout;  reported  deserted  July  7,  79.  JOSEPH— Capt 
J.  Manley;  reed  wages  May  27,  83,  of  Thomas   Russell  for  service  on 

*  For  further  genealogical  and  historical  accounts  see  under  Unclassified  Hubbard  Data  and 
Miscellany. 


I40  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

board  Frigate  Hague.  JOSEPH— pvt,  Capt  John  Davis,  Col  Fry;  enl 
Feb  14,  75.  JOSEPH— pvt,  Capt  Benj  Beal,  Col  Jacob  Gerrish;  enl 
July  26,  78,  to  guard  stores  and  troops  of  Convention  at  Boston,  dis  Dec 
I3j  78.  '  JOSEPH— Capt  Jeremiah  Putnam,  Col  Nath'l  Wade;  enl  Sep 
1,  78,  dis  Nov  1,  78. 

jOSH— enl  for  3  yrs,  Col  Smith's  (late  Wigglesworth)  regt;    in  ser- 
vice May  18,  80. 

JOSHUA  (Boston)— pvt,  Capt  King,  Col  Marshall,  transf  to  Col  Shel- 
don's Dragoons,  must'd  by  Nath'l  Barber;  in  service  at  Boston  Jan  1, 
80,  to  May  25,  80;  reed  $300  bounty;  age  33,  5  ft  3  in,  brown  compl;  enl 
by  Corpl  Brass.  JOSHUA  (Hingham)— fifer,  Capt  Christ.  Woodbridge, 
Col  Smith;  served  from  Mch  15,  77,  to  Dec  31,  79.  JOSHUA  (York  Co, 
Me)— drafted;  Capt  Sam'l  Grant,  Col  John  Frost,  2d  York  Co  regt;  in 
service  May  7,  77.  JOSHUA— pvt,  Capt  Sam'l  King,  Col  Thos  Marshall; 
enl  Jan  1,  77,  for  3  yrs;  served  2  yrs  24  days;  at  West  Point  Feb  1,  79; 
dis  Jan  12,  80.  JOSHUA— seaman,  ship  Protector,  commanded  by  Capt 
John  F.  Williams;  enl  Jan  1,  80,  dis  May  1,  80. 

JOSIAH— fifer,  Col  Edward  Wigglesworth,  later  of  Calvin  Smith's 
regt;  in  service  from  77  to  80. 

JUDD  IMER  (Sandisfield,  Berkshire  Co)— pvt,  Capt  Sam'l  Walcott, 
Col  John  Brown;  enl  June  30,  77,  dis  July  21,  77;  mchd  by  order  of 
Brig-Gen  Fellows  to  reinforce  Northern  army. 

KETO  (Tewkesbury)— pvt,  Capt  Chas  Furbush,  Col  Bridge;  enl  July 

20,  75,  dis  Aug  1,  75. 

LAZARUS  (Methuen)— enl  for  9  mos;  arrived  at  Fishkill  July  4; 
raised  by  resolve  Apl  26,  78,  from  Whittier's  Co,  Col  Johnson's  4th 
Regt;  30  yrs,  5  ft  8  in;  at  Andover  June  2,  78,  at  Fort  Arnold  July  3,  78, 
return  of  Jonathan  Warner.  LAZARUS— served  5  mos  in  Canada  for 
town  of  Dracut  by  order  Congress  June,  77;  hired  by  Robert  Nicolas; 
reported  in  2d  Dracut  Co.  LAZARUS— pvt,  Capt  John  Davis,  Col 
James  Fry;  in  service  at  Cambridge,  May  17,  75.  LAZARUS— pvt, 
Capt  Sam'l  Carr,  Col  James  Wesson;  enl  July  11,  78,  dis  Feb  1,  79. 

LEVI  (Holden)— pvt,  Capt  John  Cutler,  Col  Luke  Drury;  Aug  20,  Si, 
dis  Nov  28,  81,  travel  included;  at  West  Point  Aug  28,  (?)  LEVI  (Pep- 
perell)— Lexington  Alarm,  Capt  John  Sawtell,  Col  James  Prescott. 
LEVI  (Worcester)— Capt  Benj  Warren,  22d  Division;  company  raised 
for  6  mos;  mchd  to  camp  July  20,80;  age  17,  5  ft  8  in,  It  compl.  LEVI, 
pvt,  Maj  Harwood,  6th  regt;  enl  July  20,  80;  served  12  days;  in  ser- 
vice also  in  Aug  and  Sep,  80.  LEVI— pvt,  Capt  Francis  Wilson,  Col 
Sam'l  Denny;  enl  Oct  26,  79,  dis  Nov  23,  79;  to  reinforce  Cont.  Army 
in  N.  Y.  LEVI— pvt,  Col  Thomas  Nixon;  enl  July  20,  80,  dis  Dec 
17,  80. 


PAYMASTER-GENERAL  NEHEMIAH  HUBBARD 
(Revolutionary  War)  of  Middletown,  Ct. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.) 


141 


CONCORD    MINUTE    MAN. 

(Erected  through  the  Philanthropy  of  Ebenezer  Hubbard  of  Concord,  Mass.) 


145 


REVOLUTIONARY  WAR  HUBBARD  PATRIOTS.        I43 

LUCIUS  (Sunderland)— fifer,  Capt  Oliver  Coney, Col  Sears;  enl  Aug 
12,  Si,  dis  Nov  15,  81;  in  service  Oct  3,  83. 

LUTHERICK— pvt,  Lt-Col  Brooks;  enl  July  13,  So,  for  6  mos. 

MEL  (Holden)— corpl;  mchd  July  9,  80,  dis  Jan  12,  Si. 

MILES  (Boston,  also  given  Salem)— corpl  and  sergt,  Capt  Nath'l 
Donnell,  Col  John  Crane's  3d  Arty;  enl  Jan  1,  77,  by  Lieut  Perry  for 
the  var;  at  Greenwich  Nov  10,  79;  at  West  Point  Jan  9,  Si.  MILES 
(Salem)— bombardier,  Capt  Edward  Craft,  Col  Rich'd Gridley;  enl  June 
5,  75,  served  8  weeks  1  day;  reed  bounty  coat;  at  French  Lines  Oct  12. 
75.  MILES  (Suffolk  Co)— must'd  by  Nath'l  Barber  for  3  yrs,  Maj  Eben 
Stevens'  regt;  at  Boston  Jan  19,  77;   reed  ^20  bounty. 

MOSES  (Berkshire  Co)— sergt,  Capt  Enoch  Noble,  Col  John  Ashley, 
Jr,  also  Col  John  Brown;  enl  June  29,  77,  dis  July  28,  77,  and  enl  Oct  5, 
77,  dis  Oct  17,  77;  mchd  by  order  Brig-Gen  John  Fellows  at  time  Forts 
George  and  Ann  were  taken  by  enemy;  shown  as  Lieut  in  Oct,  81. 
MOSES  (Berwick,  Me)— pvt,  Capt  Philip  Hubbard,  Col  James  Scam- 
mon;  enl  May  5,  75,  served  3  mos  4  days;  sergt  in  Jan,  76;  stationed  at 
Littery  Point  and  Old  York  from  Nov  14  to  Dec  31,  76;  reed  bounty 
coat.  MOSES  (Hadley)— pvt,  Capt  Joshua  Parker,  Col  Nath'l  Wade; 
enl  for  12  mos  from  Jan  1,  78.  MOSES  (Hampshire  Co— Berkshire)— 
Capt  Moses  Kellogg,  Col  E.  Porter;  enl  July  10,  77,  dis  Aug  16,  77,  in- 
cluding travel;  mchd  to  More's  Creek  under  Maj-Gen  Schuyler  to  re-en- 
force Cont  Army.  MOSES  (Sunderland)— Capt  Dix,  7th  division; 
mchd  to  camp  July  7,  So,  enl  for  6  mos;  dis  Jan  7,  81;  detached  from 
Capt  Montague's  Co,  Col  Williams'  regt;  joined  Capt  Partridge's  Co, 
Col  Greaton's  regt;  age  19  yrs,  6  ft  1  in,  dk  compl.  MOSES  (Wen- 
ham)— pvt,  Capt  Rob't  Dodge,  Col  Ebenezer  Francis;  mchd  to  camp 
and  home  again;  roll  sworn  to  Nov  29,  76.  MOSES— pvt,  Capt  Sam'l 
Lamb,  Col  Nath'l  Wade;  enl  June  22,  dis  Sep  1,7s,  stationed  at  East 
Greenwich,  R.  I.;  at  Warwick,  Nov  7,  78;  served  12  mos  from  Jan  1,  78; 
in  service  Jan  1,79.  MOSES— pvt,  Capt  Sam'l  Grant,  Col  Storer;  enl  Aug 
14,  77,  served  with  Northern  Army;  dis  Oct  23,  77,  at  Cooman's  Height. 

NAT  (Braintree)— Capt  Bussey,  Col  John  Crane's  Arty,  also  Col 
II awe's  regt;  enl  for  3  yrs;  at  Boston  May  11,  77;  reed  ^20  bounty; 
also  Col  Ebenezer  Thayer,  Jr's  5th  regt  for  3  yrs.  NAT— served  from 
Oct  25,  84,  to  Jan  24,  85,  at  Castle  in  Capt  Thos  Cushing's  Co. 

NATHAN  (Berkshire  Co)— Capt  Elijah  Deming,  Col  John  Ashley; 
enl  Apl  26,  77,  dis  May  20,  77;  ordered  to  Saratoga  by  Maj-Gen  Gates; 
enl  July  8,  77,  dis  July  28,  77;  ordered  to  Fort  Edward  by  Maj-Gen 
Schuyler;  enl  Aug  16,  77,  dis  Aug  22,  77;  Berkshire  Co  Regt  ordered  to 
Bennington  by  Brig-Gen  Stark;  enl  July  15,  76,  dis  Aug  5,  76,  Capt 
John  King,  Col  Hopkin's  Regt.     NATHAN— pvt,  Capt  N.  Allen  (late 


144  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Soul's  Co),  Col  Asa  Whitcomb's  regt;  enl  Dec  13,  75,  served  11  mos,  14 
days,  at  Ticonderoga  Nov  27,  76. 

NATHANIEL  (Blanford,  born  in  Granville)— Capt  Benj  Heywood, 
6th  regt,  enl  June  1,  81,  for  3  yrs;  in  service  in  82;  ^60  bounty  paid; 
age  29,  5  ft  1 1  in,  dk  eyes  and  compl,  occupation  turner,  also  given 
farmer.  NATHANIEL  (Dorchester)— Capt  Edward  Burbeck,  Col 
Rich'd  Gridley's  Arty  Regt;  enl  May  10,75,  served  2  mos,  16  days;  reed 
bounty  coat.  NATHANIEL  (Ipswich)— Capt  Rob't  Dodge,  Col  Jona- 
than Titcomb;  enl  Apl  25,  77,  for  R.  I.  service;  at  Warren,  R.  I.,  June 
28,  77.  NATHANIEL— pvt,  Col  Benj  Tupper,  10th  Regt,  on  roll  from 
Jan  /,  82,  to  Jan  1,  S3.  NATHANIEL— pvt,  Capt  Benj  Heywood's  4th 
Co,  Col  Benj  Tupper's  6th  regt;  in  service,  Jan,  Mch,  Apl,  83;  transf 
from  10th  regt.  NATHANIEL— matross,  Capt  Bryant,  or  Patten's 
Arty  Corps  at  Springfield;  enl  for  3  yrs;  in  service  in  Jan  and  May, 
So;  also  in  Capt  Benj  Frothingham's  Co,  Cal  John  Crane's  regt  at 
Springfield;  re-enl  Mch  24,  81;  reed  bounty  of  Rufus  Blair;  also  in  Col 
Mason's  regt.  NATHANIEL— reed  wages  while  in  Col  Marshall's 
and  other  regts  from  78  to  82. 

NEHEMIAH  (Hingham)— pvt,  Capt  Stowers'  Ind  Co;  in  service  at 
Hull  Mch  1,  77;  age  16  yrs.  NEHEMIAH— pvt,  Capt  Thos  Nash,  Col 
David  Cushing;  enl  Dec  20,  77,  dis  Mch  1,  78;  served  in  Maj  Edward 
Proctor's  Detachment  of  Guards  at  Fort  Hill,  Boston.  NEHEMIAH— 
pvt,  Capt  Silas  Wild,  Col  Edmund  Phinney;  enl  May  1,  76;  in  garrison 
at  Fort  George  Dec  8,  76,  sick  in  general  hospital.  NEHEMIAH— pvt, 
Capt  Theophilus  Wilder,  Col  Benj  Gill;  enl  for  service  in  Northern 
Dept  Aug  24,  77,  dis  Nov  29,  77. 

NICHOLAS  (Boston)— pvt,  Capt  Sam'l  Foster,  Col  John  Greaton, 
must'd  by  Nath'l  Barber  Feb  16,  77;  at  Albany  Jan  2,  78;  reported  de- 
serted.    NICHOLAS— pvt,  in  Arnold's  Legion  in  July,  78. 

NOADIAH— pvt,  Capt  Moses  Ashley,  also  Capt  Hancock,  Col  Joseph 
Vose,  14th  regt,  also  18th  regt;  enl  Sep  14,  77,  for  3  yrs;  mchd  to 
Peekskill;  at  Valley  Forge  Jan  6,  78;  served  at  Providence,  Mch,  Apl 
and  May,  79,  and  Dec,  78;  on  command  at  Warwick;  enl  Jan  1,  80,  dis 
Sep  26,  80;  at  Camp  Tenith  Aug  31,  80.  NOADIAH  (Sheffield)— Capt 
Downing,  also  Capt  Hancock,  Col  Moses  Ashley;  enl  for  3  yrs. 

NOAH  (Berkshire  Co)— pvt,  Capt  Wm  Fellows'  Co;  company  of 
matrosses  under  Lieut  Paul  Dewey  in  Brig-Gen  John  Fellows'  Brigade 
of  Berkshire  Co;  ordered  out  to  serve  under  Maj-Gen  Gates;  enl  Sep  21, 

dis  Oct  9,  77. 

OLIVER  (Chesterfield)— bombardier,  also  corpl,  Capt  David  Hen- 
shaw,  Col  Thos  Craft's  Arty;  served  from  Nov  19,  76,  to  May  8,  77,  with 
travel  allowance. 


REVOLUTIONARY  WAR  HUBBARD  PATRIOTS.       l^ 

PAUL  (Berkshire  Co) — sergt,  Capt  Wm  Wells,  3d  Berkshire;  mchd 
on  alarm  to  Saratoga  Oct  29,  81,  dis  Nov  7,  Si;  on  roll  Oct  25,  83. 
PAUL  (Berkshire  Co) — corpl,  Capt  John  Strong,  C<>1  John  Brown;  enl 
June  30,  77,  dis  July  20,  77.  PAUL  (Pittsfield) — Capt  Wm  Francis; 
mchd  to  Albany  Jan  14,  76,  to  Ticonderoga  Oct  17,  76,  to  Kinderhook 
May  4,  77,  to  Stillwater  Sep  30,  77;  served  also  under  Capt  John  Strong. 
PAUL — matross,  also  sergt,  Capt  Rufus  Allen, Col  David  Rossiter;  enl 
Oct  14,  78,  dis  Oct  17,  78;  mchd  on  alarm  Oct  18,  80,  dis  Oct  21,  80. 
PAUL — pvt,  Lieut  James  Hubbard,  Lt-Col  David  Rossiter;  enl  Aug  17, 
77,  dis  Aug  22,  77. 

PETER  (Holden) — pvt,  Capt  James  Davis,  Col  Doolittle;  mchd  Apl 
19,  75,  Lexington  Alarm;  served  124  days.  PETER  (Middleton) — Capt 
Nath'l  Alexander,  Col  Edward  Wigglesworth.  PETER— pvt,  Capt 
Jesse  Stone,  Col  Job  Gushing;  enl  July  27,  77,  dis  Aug  29,  77;  mchd  to 
Bennington  by  order  Brig-Gen  Warner,  roll  dated  at  Oxford.  PETER — 
surgeon's  mate,  on  list  officers  in  Col  Solomon  Lovell's  Regt;  in  service 
for  3  mos  to  re-enforce  Cont  Army.  PETER — Capt  Bounds;  in  service 
in  June,  75,  as  shown  on  armorer's  account. 

PHILIP  (Berwick,  Me) — Capt  in  Col  James  Scammon's  regt;  enl 
May  2,  75;  at  Cambridge  May  23,  75;  reed  commission  June  2,  75;  sta- 
tioned at  Kittery  Point  and  Old  York  Sep  1,  76,  for  2  mos,  13  days,  for 
sea  coast  defence;  in  service  also  from  Mch  1,  76,  to  May  3,  76,  same 
place.  PHILIP  (Berwick,  Me)— pvt,  Capt  Philip  Hubbard,  Col  James 
Scammon;  enl  July  20,  75;  stationed  at  Kittery  Point  from  Nov  14  to 
Dec  31,  76.  PHILIP,  JR  (Berwick)— com'd  1st  Lieut  Apl  29,  76;  in 
1  2th  Co,  2d  York  (6th  Berwick  Co)  under  Capt  Josiah  Staples. 

PHINEAS  (Groton) — corpl,  also  sergt,  Capt  Henry  Farwell,  Col  Wm 
Prescott;  mchd  Apl  19,  75,  on  Lexington  Alarm;  service  6  days;  enl 
Apl  25,  75,  service  9S  days. 

PHIXEHAS  (Littleton  or  Westford)— pvt,  Capt  Asa  Lawrence,  Col 
Jonathan  Reed;  enl  Sep  27,  77,  served  in  the  army  under  Gen  Gates,  dis 
Nov  9,  77.  PHIXEHAS — corpl,  Capt  John  Nutting,  Col  Wm  Mcintosh, 
Gen  Lovell's  Brigade;  enl  July  30,  77,  dis  Sep  12,  78. 

REUBEN  (Worcester) — Capt  Benj  Warren,  22d  Division;  mchd  to 
camp  July  20,  80  (Springfield);  age  18,  5  ft  9  in,  ruddy  compl.  REU- 
BEN— pvt,  Capt  Michael  J.  Houdin,  Col  Rufus  Putnam,  5th  regt;  enl 
July  20,  So,  for  6  mos;  roll  dated  Jan  20,  81,  reports  him  dis.  REUBEN, 
Col  Timothy  Bigelow;  enl  July  20,  So,  for  6  mos. 

RICHARD  (Boston) — seaman,  Capt  James  Tisdale,  also  Capt  Thos 
Williams,  Col  John  Greaton;  enl  by  Lieut  Tuttle  May  9,  77,  for  3  yrs  or 
during  the  war;  at  Peekskill  Sept  1,  Si,  also  Oct  and  Nov,  Si,  at  Camp 
Plighlands,  also  at   West  Point  May   1,  Si,  and  Jan,  82;   sick   at   New 


146 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Windsor  in  Sep,  81;  age  52  yrs,  5  ft  7  in,  It  hair,  gray  eyes;  at  Hutts, 
New  Boston,  May  13,82;  transf  to  Invalid  Corps  Aug  30,  82.  RICHARD, 
enl  into  Cont  Army  from  Suffolk  Co,  for  Dorchester,  a  foreigner,  by 
Nath'l  Barber,  muster  master.  RICHARD — pvt,  Capt  Abraham  Wat- 
son, Col  John  Great  on,  3d  regt;  enl  July  1,  80,  for  6  mos,  or  for  the  war 

ROSWELL — pvt,  Capt  Abijah  Savage,  Col  Henry  Sherburne;  enl 
May  20,  77,  for  3  yrs;   in  R.  I.  Aug  21,  78. 

RUSSELL  (Ludlow) — Hampshire  Co  nth  Co,  must'd  for  3  mos  to 
re-enforce  Cont  Arm}7;  return  made  by  Col  John  Bliss;  receipt  for 
bounty  Apl  26,  81.  RUSSELL— pvt,  Capt  John  Carpenter;  enl  Mch 
16,  79,  for  service  as  guard  at  Springfield,  dis  June  16,  79.  RUSSELL, 
pvt,  Capt  Joseph  Browning,  Col  Seth  Murray;  enl  July  24, 80,  dis  Oct 
10,  80;   Hampshire  Co  regt  to  re-enforce  Cont.  Army. 

SAMUEL  (Berkshire  Co)— pvt,  Capt  Noah  Lankton,  Col  John  Ash- 
ley; enl  July  22,  77,  mchd  in  1st  Berkshire  Co  regt  to  Kingsbury, 
orders  Brig-Gen  John  Fellows,  dis  Aug  14,  77,  roll  dated  at  Tyringham. 
SAMUEL  (Berwick,  Me) — Capt  Philip  Hubbard,  Col  James  Scammon; 
receipt  Dec  21,  75,  for  8  mos'  service,  reed  bounty  coat.  SAMUEL 
(Blanford) — enl  from  Hampshire  Co  for  9  mos  from  arrival  at  Fishkill; 
arr  June,  78;  returns  of  Jonathan  Warner,  comr.  SAMUEL  (Brain- 
tree) — enl  Mch  31,  81,  for  3  years.  SAMUEL  (Concord)— corpl,  Lieut 
Ephraim  Wheeler,  Col  Eleazer  Brook;  enl  Mch  4,  76,  dis  Mch  10,  76; 
mchd  to  Roxbury  for  defence  of  Boston.  SAMUEL  (Dudley)  pvt,  Capt 
Nath'l  Healey,  Col  Learned;  enl  May  1,  75,  served  3  mos,  8  days. 
SAMUEL  (Holden)— 2d  Lieut,  Capt  James  Davis,  Col  Doolittle;  mchd 
Apl  19,  75,  on  Lexington  Alarm,  served  5^  days;  com'd  captain  Mch  5, 
79,  in  3d  Co,  1st  Worcester  Co  Regt,  commanded  by  Col  Denny;  also 
in  Col  Job  Cushing's  regt;  paid  for  service  from  Aug  26  to  Oct  12,  77, 
at  Scarsdale  Nov  30,  77.  SAMUEL  (Holden)— joined  Col  [Joseph?] 
Hubbard,  late  Col  Denny's  regt;  enl  Mch  5,  81,  for  3  yrs;  age  20,  5  ft 
3  in,  It  compl,  farmer.  SAMUEL  (Holden) — pvt,  Capt  Geo  Webb,* 
also  Capt  James  Tisdale,  Col  John  Greaton;  enl  May  14,  Si,  for  3  yrs; 
at  Philipsburg,  July  n,  81;  on  roll  dated  Hutts,  New  Boston,  Feb  1,  82; 
age  20,  5  ft  4  in,  brown  compl,  brown  eyes.  SAMUEL,  JR  (Holden), 
com'd  1st  Lieut  3d  Co  1st  Worcester  Militia  Apl  5,  76,  Capt  Nath'l 
Harrington,  Col  Sam'l  Denny.  SAMUEL  (London)  pvt,  Lieut  Nath'l 
Wood;   mchd  Apl  21,  75,   Lexington  Alarm,   8  days' service;  promoted 

*  In  this  company  served  Deborah  Sampson,  an  American  young  lady,  for  nearly  three  years,  who 
performed  her  soldierly  duties  with  fidelity  and  cheerfulness,  enduring  her  share  of  danger  and  pri- 
vation with  Spartan-like  fortitude.  This  company  was  also  complimented  by  Gen.  Lafayette  as  fol- 
lows :  "Milton,  Mat  15, 1781— Dear  Sir  :  Your  successful  scarmish  afforded  me  the  greatest  pleasure, 
and  I  request  you  will  receive  yourself,  and  present  to  your  company,  my  best  thanks  on  the  occa 
sion.  [Signed]  Lafatette." 


REVOL I 'TIOXARY  WAR  HUBBARD  PA  TRIOTS.       ^  j 

corpl,  Capt  Dan'l  Whiting-,  Col  Jonathan  Brewer,  return  of  Oct  26,  75, 
at  Cambridge;  Oct  6,  75,  reported  as  gone  to  Quebec.  SAMUEL 
(Otis,  Berkshire  Co) — Capt  James  Tisdale,  Col  John  Greaton,  also 
Lieut-Col  James  Millin;  enl  Mch  15,  81,  for  3  yrs,  served  19  mos,  24 
days;  at  Peekskill  Oct  1,  81;  "dis  June  12,  83,  at  New  Windsor  by  hir- 
ing a  man  in  his  place."  SAMUEL,  JR  (Otis,  Berkshire  Co) — sergt, 
Capt  Jacob  Cooke,  Col  John  Ashley;  enl  July  8,  77,  dis  July  28,  77,  per- 
forming service  at  Saratoga;  also  Capt  James  Tisdale,  Col  John  Grea- 
ton; enl  May  14,  Si,  for  3  yrs;  served  18  mos,  29  days.  SAMUEL 
(Palmer) — enl  from  Hampshire  Co  for  9  mos  from  arrival  at  Fishkill; 
arr  June  9  [78].  SAMUEL — pvt,  Capt  Sam'l  Hubbard,  Col  Job  Cush- 
ing;  enl  Sep  5,  77,  dis  Nov  29,  77,  including6  days'  travel;  detached  from 
Col  Brooks'  regt.  SAMUEL — pvt,  Capt  Francis  Wilson,  Col  Sam'l 
Denny;  enl  Oct  21,  79,  to  re-enforce  Cont.  Army  in  New  York,  dis  Nov 
23,  79.  SAMUEL — matross,  Capt  Amos  Lincoln,  Col  Revere's  Arty; 
in  service  from  Feb  1,  78,  to  Dec  31,  79.  SAMUEL — pvt,  Capt  Sam'l 
Grant,  Col  Storer;  enl  Aug  14,  77,  to  serve  in  Northern  Army,  dis  Nov 
30,  77,  at  Cooman's  Height.  SAMUEL — pvt,  Capt  Dan'l  Sackett,  Col 
Ruggles  Woodbridge;  enl  Aug  20,  77,  for  service  at  the  northward;  dis 
Nov  29,  77.     SAMUEL — com'd  ensign  in  Col  Whitney's  regt  Feb  13, 

76.  SAMUEL — matross,  Capt  Lincoln,  also  Capt  Wm  Treadwell,  Col 
John  Crane's  3d  regt;  enl  for  3  yrs;  in  service  in  Aug  and  Sep,  Si;  at 
Castle  Island  Sep  17,  79.  SAMUEL — corpl,  Capt  Dan'l  Harrington,  Col 
Jonathan  Read's  regt  guards  at  Cambridge;  receipt  3  mos'  wages  from 
Apl  2,  78.  SAMUEL — Lieut,  Capt  Jesse  Stone,  Col  Job  Cushing;  enl 
July  27,  77,  dis  Aug  29,  77,  including  6  days'  travel;  roll  dated  at  Ox- 
ford; mchd  to  Bennington  July,  77,  orders  of  Brig-Gen  Warner.  SAM- 
UEL— pvt,  Capt  John  Morgan,  Col  Ruggles  Woodbridge;  enl  Sep   10, 

77,  reported  deserted  Oct  27,  77.  SAMUEL — pvt,  Capt  Joel  Green, Col 
Ezra  Wood;  in  service  from  June  1,  78,  to  Jan  31,  79,  8  mos'  levies;  at 
Peekskill  and  White  Plains.  SAMUEL— pvt,  Capt  John  Chadwick,  Col 
Sam'l  Brewer;  enl  June  9,  77,  dis  Mch,  78. 

SELAH — pvt,  Capt  Abijah  Savage,  Col  Henry  Sherburne;  enl  May 
21,  77,  for  3  yrs;  in  Rhode  Island  Aug  31,  78. 

SETH  (Berkshire  Co) — pvt,  Capt  Elijah  Deming,  Col  John  Ashley; 
enl  July  8,  77,  dis  July  28,  77,  at  Fort  Edward;  also  Stillwater.  SETH— 
pvt,  Capt  N.  Allen  (late  Soul's  Co),  Col  Asa  Whitcomb;  enl  Dec  13,  75; 
at  Ticonderoga  Nov  27,  76;  11  mos,  14  days'  service.  SETH — pvt,  Capt 
Ebenezer  Sheldon,  Col  Seth  Murray;  enl  July  12,  80,  to  re-enforce  Cont. 
Army,  dis  Oct  10,  So. 

SILAS  (Berkshire  Co) — pvt,  Capt  Chas  Dibble,  Col  Rossiter's  3d 
Regt;  enl  Oct  18,   80;  mchd  on  alarm,  dis  Oct  21,  80.     SILAS — sergt, 


148 


// 1  lUl  A  RD   HIS  TOR  \ '  AND   GENE  A  LOG  V. 


Capt  Nath'l  Donnell,  Col  John   Crane's  3d  Arty  Regt;  in  service  Feb 
and  Mch,  81,  at  West  Point;  on  furlough  to  Apl  1,  81. 

SOUTH  WICK  (Charlton)— enl  July  13,  80,  for  6  mos  in  7th  regt, 
Capt  Thos  Pritchard,  14th  division;  disabled,  reported  unfit  for  service 
in  81;  reed  $300  bounty;  age  60  yrs,  5  ft  9  in,  It  compl. 

STEPHEN— pvt,  Capt  Philip  Hubbard;  enl  Jan  22,  76;  stationed  at 
Kittery  Point  and  Old  York. 

THOMAS — (Groton)  pvt,  Capt  John  Sawtelle,  Col  James  Prescott; 
mchd  Apl  19,  75,  on  Lexington  Alarm;  service  20^  days.  THOMAS 
(Lanesborough) — pvt,  Capt  David  Wheeler,  Col  Benj  Simond;  enl  Oct 
26,  80,  dis  Oct  31,  80.  THOMAS — com'd  capt  Mch  27,  76,  4th  Co,  3d 
Middlesex  Co  regt,  Col  Francis  Faulkner;  mchd  to  capture  Burgoyne 
in  77;  formed  3d  guard  in  Cambridge,  78;  resigned  June  4,  80,  to  accept 
appointment  to  superior  command.  THOMAS — pvt,  Capt  Benj  Bon- 
ney,  Col  Dickinson;  enl  Aug  17,  77,  dis  Aug  22,  77.  THOMAS — Con- 
cord Minute  Man;  Apl  19,  75,  to  Nov,  76;  "  afterward  captain." 

TIMOTHY— Capt  Selah  Heart,  Col  Walcutt;  paid  June  26,  76,  for  2 
mos'  wages  earned  in  75.  TIMOTHY — pvt,  Capt  Abijah  Savage,  Col 
Henry  Sherburne;  enl  May  2,  77,  for  3  yrs;  in  R.  I.  Aug  21,  78;  reported 
on  command  with  the  armorer.  TIMOTHY — clerk,  Lieut  Moses  Hub- 
bard, Col  John  Ashley,  Jr;  Brig-Gen  John  Fellows' Brigade,  raised  by 
Brig-Gen  Stark;  service  performed  in  Oct,  81. 

WARWICK  (Wells)— com'd  Lieut  June  26,  76,  in  nth  Wells  Co,  Capt 
Lemuel  Hatch,  Col  Ebenezer  Saver's  1st  York  Co  regt;  also  in  10th  Co. 

WILLIAM  (Braintree) — served  under  Capt  Lincoln  for  3  yrs,  and 
reed  ,£100  bounty,  return  of  Nath'l  Barber,  dated  Boston,  July  25,  80, 
farmer,  16  yrs,  5  ft,  It  compl.  WILLIAM  (Brookfield) — marine,  Com- 
mander Salstonstall,  ship  Warren;  reported  lost  right  leg  at  Penobscot; 
age  42;  allowed  pension  Mch  17,  S6.  WILLIAM  (Sunderland)  corpl; 
mchd  Apl  19,  75,  on  Lexington  Alarm,  served  8  days  with  Capt  Noadiah 
Leonard,  also  Capt  Reuben  Dickinson,  Col  Ruggles  Woodbridge;  travel- 
ing expenses  allowed  to  and  from  Ticonderoga  in  76.  WILLIAM — 
matross,  Capt  Amos  Lincoln,  Col  Revere;  enl  Apl  6,  79,  dis  Dec  31,  79, 
also  under  Capt  Amos  Lincoln,  Col  Thos  Craft's  Arty;  enl  June  26,  80, 
dis  Apl  1,  81;  enl  Nov  1,  82,  dis  June  26,  S3;  in  service  at  the  Castle, 
Governor's  Island,  from  July  25,  84,  to  Oct  24,  84,  under  Capt  Thos 
Gushing.  WILLIAM — pvt,  Capt  Caleb  Montague,  Col  Williams;  enl 
July  11,  77,  dis  Aug  12,  77,  travel  included,  service  in  expedition  in 
Northern  Dept.  WILLIAM  (Weston,  Middlesex  Co)— Capt  Sam'l  Sam- 
son; Lexington  Alarm. 

ZADOCK  (Lanesborough) — pvt,  Capt  Asa  Barnes,  Col  Benj  Simond's 
Berkshire  Co  regt;  enl  Oct  14,  So,  dis  Oct  21,  80;  enl  Oct  26,  So,  and 
served  5  days. 


■^  ^w&$£fflmMm£*mK  < 


Ay,  call  it  holy  ground,  the  soil  where  first  they  trod  ! 

They  have  left  unstain'd  what  there  they  found:  Freedom  to  worship  God  ! 

— Felicia  Dorothea  Hemans. 

The  compiler  spells  this  name  "Hobart"  because  his  descendants  generally  prefer  such  form  of 
orthography  and  scout  at  the  idea  of  any  other  being  correct.  The  writer  think*  he  was  a  "Hub- 
bard "  scion,  and  so  gives  him  and  his  descendants  space  in  this  volume,  but  quarrels  not  with  those 
who  think  differently.  Many  of  the  early  Colonial  writers  wrote  the  name  'Hubbard."  and 
Adolphus  Skinner  Hubbard,  San  Francisco,  Cal  ,  one  of  EDMUND'S  descendants,  now  uses  this  form 
of  spelling  the  name.  A  large  portion  of  the  following  genealogical  records  has  been  taken  from  town 
histories,  which  somewhat  impair  their  accuracy  and  throw  a  little  shadow  of  doubt  upon  the  number 
and  correct  names  of  his  children.  In  the  shire  of  Norfolk,  England,  are  various  parishes  giving  in 
full  the  antecedents  and  data  of  the  family  of  this  EDMUND  HOBART,  including  his  first  wife's 
name,  his  children's  names,  etc,  which  the  compiler  was  precluded  from  obtaining  on  account  of  ex- 
orbitant fees  demanded. 

EDMUND  HOBART  was  born  about  1574  in  Hingham,  Norfolk, 
Eng.,  and  died  in  Hingham,  Mass.,  Mch  8,  1648.  He  arrived  with 
his  wife,  son  Joshua,  daughters  Rebekah  and  Sarah,  and  servant,  Henry 
Gibbs,  in  May,  1633,  and  settled  in  Charlestown,  Mass.  (The  mother  of 
these  children,  whom  he  married  in  England  in  1597,  died  in  1641.)  He 
was  made  a  freeman  March  4,  1633-4  and  admitted  to  full  communion 
in  the  First  Church  of  Christ*  in  Boston  August  19,  1633-4,  and  stood 
N(  >.  ''15  "  on  the  "  freeman's  list,"  and  was  one  of  ten  citizens  October 
13,  1634,  who,  with  Increase  Nowell,  agreed  that  only  certain  desirable 
persons  should  be  allowed  to  "sit  downe  and  dwell  in  the  towne."  In 
1635  he  was  the  constable  of  Charlestown.  This  same  year  he  removed 
to  Bear  Cove  (Hingham)  and  assisted  in  organizing  the  first  church 
there,  of  which  his  son  Peter  was  the  first  minister,  and  was  made  a 
commissioner  Sep  6,  1638,  the  functions  being  similar  to  those  of  a  Jus- 
tice of  the  Peace  nowadays,  permitting  him  to  officiate  at  marriage  cer- 
emonies, a  privilege  then  denied  to  many  ministers.     He  was  Deputy 

*  Organized  in  summer  of  1030  under  a  great  oak  by  John  Winthrop,  Isaac  Johnson,  Thomas  Dud- 
ley, and  Rev.  John  Wilson.     In  1032  a  meeting-house  was  built  in  Boston  on  the  present  State  Street. 
149 


15° 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


OLD    CHURCH    AT    HINGHAM,    MASS. 


to  the  General  Court  in  1639-40-41-42,  and  was  generally  spoken  of  as 
"EDMUND  HUBBERD  the  elder."  His  second  wife,  Ann,  was  the 
widow  of  Rev.  John  Lyford,  an  Episcopal  clergyman  from  Laughgaid, 
Ardmagh,  Ireland,  who  was  banished  from  Plymouth  Colony  in  1624. 
She  was  "a  grave  matron  and  of  good  carriage,"  and  died  June  23, 
1649.  Children — Nazareth,  Rebecca,  Sarah,  Edmund,  Peter,  Thomas 
and  Joshua,  all  born  in  England.  (There  were  probably  other  children 
who  died  there  in  infancy.) 

REBECCA  was  born  in  England  about  1598,  and  came  with  her 
parents,  sister,  and  brother  to  Charlestown,  Mass,  in  1633.  She  was  ad- 
mitted there  to  the  1st  Church  of  Christ,  Dec.  27,  1633,  with  her  brother 
Joshua. 

SARAH  was  born  in  England  about  1600  and  came  with  parents, 
sister,  and  brother  Joshua  to  Charlestown,  Mass.,  in  1633. 

NAZARETH  was  born  in  England  before  1600,  and  died  Sep  23, 
1658.  She  married  in  England  John  Beal  (b  1581,  d  June  15,  1681). 
They  arrived  in  New  England  in  1638   on  the  Diligent,  from  London, 


EDMUND  HOB  ART,   OF  H INGHAM,  MASS.  I5i 

with  five  sons,  three  daughters  and  two  servants.  He  was  admitted 
freeman  Mch  13,  1639,  and  was  a  Representative  to  General  Court  in 
1649.  (He  afterward  married  widow  of  Nicholas  Jacob.)  Children — 
Jacob,  Rebecca,  Martha,  Mary,  Sarah,  John,  Joshua,  Nathaniel  and 
Caleb. 

EDMUND,  Jr,  eldest  son  of  Edmund  Hobart,  was  born  in  1603  in 
England  and  died  Feb  16,  1685.  He  came  with  his  wife  Elizabeth  (died 
in  Hingham  Nov  4,  1675)  to  Charlestown,  Mass.,  in  1633,  and  both  were 
admitted  to  the  1st  Church  of  Christ  Aug  21,  1633.  He  was  made 
freeman  Sep  3,  1634,  removed  to  Hingham  1635,  and  was  a  member  of 
the  famous  "trainband,"  being  fined  with  his  brothers  June  28,  1645, 
^5  for  participating  in  the  Hingham  mutiny  against  the  authority  of 
Lieut  Anthony  Eames.  Children — Elizabeth  (bap  July  19,  1635,  at 
Charlestown,  m  Mch  12,  1658,  at  Boston,  John  Tucker),  Sarah  (bap  Mch 
29,  1640,  m  Dec  9,  1664,  Return  Manning),  John  (bap  Mch  10,  1642,  m 
Apl,  1674,  Hannah  Burr),  p  Samuel  (see  following).  Martha  (bap 
June  6,  1647,  m  Oct  16,  1677,  at  Hingham,  Joseph  Bassett),  Daniel  (b 
Mch  i<S,  1649-50,  m  Oct,  1677,  Elizabeth  Warren  of  Boston). 

SON  OF  EDMUND  HOBART,  JR,  AND    HIS    DESCENDANTS. 

F1  SAMUEL — (bap  Apl  13,  1645,  m  Feb  25,  1673,  Hannah  Gold,  and 
had  Peter  (b  Jan  16,  1684),  who  had  Peter  (b  Oct  19,  1727),  who  had 
P  Elijah  (see  following). 

p-  ELIJAH — born  in  Hingham  Aug  31,  1763,  died  in  Abington, 
Mass.,  1847,  where  he  removed  in  1787,  m  same  year  (1)  Martha  Stod- 
dart  (b  1770,  d  1794),  and  had  Tamar  (b  Feb  15,  1788,  m  Nathaniel 
Beal),  Martha  (b  Nov  6,  1789,  m  Henry  Burrill),  Mehitable  (b  Dec 
23,  1 79 1,  m  Ephraim  Whiting),  Mary  (b  June,  1794,  m  John  Ripley), 
and  Sarah  (b  June,  1794,  m  Ebed  Vining,  Jr).  In  1795  ELIJAH  m 
(2)  Mary  Orcut  (b  1770,  d  1863)  of  Abington,  and  had  Elijah  (b  Dec. 
25,  1795,  m  Louisa  Pool,  dau  David  Pool  of  Abington;  they  removed  to 
Hingham  and  had  large  family),  Nancy  (b  May  8,  1799,  m  Eleazer 
Whiting),  Caleb  (b  Dec  13,  1801,  m  Nov  n,  1S23,  (1)  Mary  S.  Cushing  of 
Scituate,  who  d  Apl  18,  1839,  and  Caleb  m  June  18,  1840,  (2)  Elizabeth 
Ball  of  Dorchester,  and  had  Mary  Elizabeth  b  Apl  1,  1841;  Emma  Jane 
b  Feb  16,  1848;  Arabella  b  June  25,  1852,  d  Oct  1,  1S52;  Annabel  b  June 
25,  1852;  Henry  C.  b  Aug  18,  1853;  and  Lilla  b  Sep  5,  1858,  d  Sep  8, 
1858),  Priscilla  (b  1803,  m  William  Prouty  of  Scituate),  Sybil  (b  1805, 
m  Elijah  Prouty  of  Scituate),  Francis  (b  Feb  16,  1807,  m  Abishai  Soul 
of  Hanover),  John  (b  Jan  15,  1809,  m  May  16,  1830,  Joanna  Chandler  of 
Duxbury  and  had  Maria  Otis  b  July   11,   1831,   who  m  Oct   11,   1848, 


152 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 


William  Stoddart;  Mary  Gay  b  May  19,  1835,  d  May  1,  1836;  and  John 
Thomas  h  May  19,  1843),  Lucy  (b  Apl  4,  1811,  m  Isaac  Everson),  and 
Albert  (b  May  8,  1816,  m  Nov  26,  1837,  Sarah  J.  Ball  of  Dorchester 
and  had  Mary  Jane  b  Dec  29,  1840,  d  May  25,  1844;  Ahmzo  C,  b  Mch 
9,  1843,  m  Feb  18,  1864,  Ellen  M.  Grose  of  South  Scituate;  Albert  b 
May  14,  1845;  George  A.  b  Nov  6,  1849;  Rufus  H.  b  May  30,  1851; 
William  E.  b  Aug  15,  1855,  and  Louis  E.  b  Sep.  6,  1856). 


MEMORIAL    TABLET    IN    THE    OLD    HINGHAM    CHURCH. 


PETER,  second  son  of  Edmund  Hobart,  Sr.,  was  born  in  1604  in 
Hingham,  Norfolk,  England,  and  died  in  Hingham,  Mass.,  Jan.  20, 1679. 
He  graduated  at  Magdalene  College,  Cambridge  University,  in  1625,  as 
Master  of  Arts,  and  taught  there  for  a  short  period,  and  was  ordained  by 
the  Bishop  of  Norwich  in  1627.  He  preached  in  England  for  10  years 
and  left  Haverhill,  Eng.,  in  April,  1635,  arriving  at  Charlestown,  Mass., 
June  8,  1635,  with  his  wife  (d  about  1636)  and  four  children  in  one  of  a 


RDM  VXD  HO  BART,    OR  II I XG I  RIM,  MASS. 


53 


fleet  of  seven  vessels.  He  joined  the  Charlestown  church  June  30,  1635. 
The  first  entry  made  in  his  Journal  reads  as  follows:  "  1635 — June  8,  I, 
with  my  wife  and  four  children,  came  safely  to  New  England  June  8, 
1635.  Forever  praised  be  the  God  of  Heaven,  my  God  and  my  King!" 
His  father,  Edmund,  and  brothers  Joshua,  Edmund,  Jr.  and  Thomas,  had 
arrived  a  year  or  two  earlier.  September  2,  1635,  he  was  made  a  free- 
man, and  September  18,  1635,  he,  with  29  others,  founded  Hingham 
(name  changed  from  Bear  Cove),  Mass.,  formally  drawing  their  house- 
lots  upon  that  day.  From  1635  to  1679  he  preached  in  Hingham,  ac- 
cording to  the  memorial  tablet  now  in  the  church,  which  was  open  for 
public  worship  January  8,  1682,  the  land  being  donated  by  Capt.  Joshua 
Hobart,*  PETER'S  youngest  brother.  The  new  church  cost  "^£430  and 
the  old  house."  PETER  was  then  dead.  Rev.  Robert  Peck  was  his 
colleague,  or  "  teacher,"  the  functions  of  which  office  were  "  doctrinal 
and  scriptural  explanation,"  the  minister's  being  "private  and  public 
exhortation."  PETER  was  an  independent  and  spirited  clergyman 
and  espoused  somewhat  too  warmly  his  late  sovereign's  cause  and  Eng- 
lish customs  generally,  which  occasionally  brought  him  up  before  the' 
General  Court  to  answer  for  his  outspoken  opinions.  In  1646  he  was 
fined  ,£20  for  "  seditious  practices  and  derogation  of  and  contempt  for 
authority,"  and  was  "bound  to  his  good  behavior."  He  defended  his 
brothers  Joshua,  Edmund  and  Thomas  against  charges  of  insubordina- 
tion preferred  by  Lieut.  Anthony  Eames,  commanding  officer  of  the 
"train  band,"  and  a  member  of  his  own  church.  This  was  a  bitter  and 
disagreeable  quarrel  and  agitated  Hingham  for  many  years.  The  vari- 
ous active  participants  were  fined  a  sum  total  of  ,£155,  io.y.,  to  which 
Joshua  contributed  ^20,  Edmund  Jr.  £5,  and  Thomas  and  PETER  £2 
each. 

Governor  Winthrop  referred  to  him  in  the  following  language:  "  There 
was  a  great  marriage  to  be  solemnized  at  Boston.  The  bridegroom 
being  of  Hingham  (Mr.  Hubbard's  church),  he  was  procured  to  preach, 

*  Capt.  Joshua  Hobart  gave  the  deed  for  the  site  of  this  meeting-house  July  8,  1681.  But  little  is 
known  about  the  first  meeting-house  except  that  it  was  enclosed  by  a  palisade  and  had  a  belfry  and 
bell,  which  were  used  principally  for  defensive  purposes  against  the  hostile  attacks  of  the  unconverted 
aborigines.  The  present  meeting-house  (see  illustration)  stands  on  Main  Street,  near  the  railway  sta- 
tion, and  is  the  oldest  church  in  New  England  that  has  been  used  continuously  as  a  house  of  worship. 
The  principal  timbers  in  it  were  taken  from  the  first  house.  There  were  no  stoves  in  it  until  1622, 
when  two  of  the  front  pews  were  removed  to  make  room  for  them.  The  deacons  occupied  seats 
directly  under  the  pulpit.  Most  of  the  seats  were  simple  oak  benches  arranged  in  rows.  One  pew 
was  reserved  for  the  widow  of  Rev.  Peter  Hobart,  which  was  occupied  upon  her  death  by  the  wife  of 
the  second  minister,  Rev..  John  Norton.  A  warm  division  of  opinion,  lasting  over  a  year,  existed 
among  the  congregation  regarding  its  site.  Thiswasonly  terminated  by  the  mandate  of  the  Governor 
of  the  Massachusetts  Bay  Colony  and  his  Magistrates,  who  ordered  the  building  erected  where  it  now 
stands.  The  Tablet  gives  the  list  of  divines  from  the  beginning  to  the  present,  together  with  their 
terms  of  service. 


I54  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

and  came  to  Boston  to  that  end.  But  the  magistrate  hearing-  of  it  sent 
to  him  to  forbear.  The  reasons  were,  ( i )  For  that  his  spirit  had  been 
discovered  to  be  averse  to  our  ecclesiastical  and  civil  government,  and 
he  was  a  bold  man  and  would  speak  his  mind;  (2)  We  were  not  willing 
to  bring  in  the  English  custom  of  ministers  performing  the  solemnity 
of  marriage,  which  sermons  at  such  times  might  induce;  but  if  any 
minister  were  present,  and  would  bestow  a  word  of  exhortation,  &c,  it 
was  permitted." 

He  signed  his  name  "  Hubberd,"  though  it  was  more  commonly 
spelled  "Hobart."*  By  his  parishioners  he  was  greatly  admired,  re- 
spected, and  loved.  He  had  a  second  wife;  the  names  of  both  have 
never  yet  been  ascertained.  Children  (first  four  born  in  England)— 
Joshua,  Jeremiah,  Josiah,  Elizabeth,  Ichabod,  Hannah,  Hannah, 
Bathsheba,  Israel,  Jael,  Gershom,  Japhet,  Nehemiah,  David,  Rebecca, 
Abigail  and  Lydia. 

CHILDREN  AND  DESCENDANTS  OF  PETER  HOBART 
OF  HINGHAM,  MASS. 

JOSHUA— b  July,  1628,  in  England,  d  in  Southold,  L.  I.,  Feb  28, 
17 17-18  (H.  U.  1650),  freeman  May  18,  1653;  preached  at  Beverly,  Mass.; 
sailed  July  16,  1655,  for  Barbadoes,.and  m  there,  Apl  16,  1656,  Margaret 
Vassall  (d  Sep  9,  1659),  dau  William  and  Ann  Vassall;  arrived  in  Lon- 
don July  5,  1657;  returned  Sep  5,  1659;  m  Jan  16,  1672,  Mary  (Sunder- 
land) Rainsford  (din  Southold,  L.  I.,  Apl  19,  1698).  He  is  mentioned 
as  "  an  eminent  physician,  divine  and  civilian,  and  in  every  way  a  great, 
learned  and  pious  man."  Children — Alithea,  Irene  (b  Apl  10,  1674), 
Peter,  and  John,  who  rem. to  Kensington,  now  part  of  Philadelphia,  and 
married  there  a  Swedish  lady. 

JEREMIAH— b  Apl  6,  1630,  in  England,  d  Mch,  1716,  in  Haddam, 
Ct,  m  Apl  6,  1659,  Dorothy  Whiting  (din  Hartford,  Ct.,  after  1716,  aged 
88),  dau  Rev.  Samuel  and  Elizabeth  (St.  John)  Whiting  of  Lynn,  and 
sister  of  Rev.  Joseph  Whiting  of  Southampton,  L.  I.;  (H.  U.  1650),  free- 
man May  18,  1653;  resided  in  Lynn;  in  1667  he  preached  (?)  five  months 
in  Wells,  Me.  [there  was  a  Rev.  Jeremiah  Hubbard  there,  though  he 
may  not  have  been  this  same  one],  also  at  Topsfield,  Beverly,  and 
Hempstead,  L.  I.,  where  many  of  his  flock  became  Quakers,  moving  him 
to  settle  in  Haddam  Oct  16,  1683,  where  he  resided  until  death.  Chil- 
dren (b  in  Topsfield) — Jeremiah  (b  Dec  16,  1672),  Elizabeth  (b  Feb  8, 
1674,  m  May  2,  1704,  Hezekiah  Wyllis,  b  Apl  3,  1673,  d  Dec  24,  1741,  son 

*  S.  P.  Fowler,  Danvers,  Mass.,  says:  "  I  find  Peter  Hobart's  name  variously  spelled  by  different 
authors.  Josselyn  spells  it  Hubbard;  Lerhford,  Hubbard;  Hutchinson  Papers,  Hubbert,  and  Mather 
gives  it  Hobart." 


EDMUND  HOB  ART,  OF  H INGHAM,  MASS.  I55 

Samuel  and  Ruth  (Haynes)  Wyllis  of  Glastonbury,  Sec  State  Conn 
171  i-i 735,  and  had  George,  who  m  Mary  Woodbridge  of  Hartford — d 
Sep,  1762),  Margaret  (b  Jan  16,  1677)  and  Dorothy  (b  Aug  21,  1679). 

JOSIAH — b  1632  in  England,  d  in  Braintree  Sep  2,  1725,  m  Mary 
;  made  freeman  July  13,  1658;  lived  in  "  Spurwinke  "  (Scarbor- 
ough, and  may  have  been  the  same  one  who  was  in  Exeter,  N.  H.,  in 
1667);  removed  to  Easthampton,  L.  I.;  called  "Captain,"  and  was  sheriff 
of  Suffolk  Co.     Children — Bethiah  (b  Oct  5,  1672)  and  probably  others. 

ELIZABETH— b  1633  in  England,  d  Mch  26,  1692,  at  the  paternal 
homestead  in  Hingham  Centre,  m  John  Ripley,  eldest  son  of  William 
Ripley  of  Hingham.     Her  husband  d  Feb  3,  1683-4. 

HANNAH  (b  in  Hingham,  Mass,  and  probably  also  the  following 
children)— b  Apl  30,  1637,  d  May  19,  1637. 

HANNAH— b  May  5,  1638,111  June  2,  1658,  John  Brown  of  Salem, 
and  had  John,  b  Apl  4,  1659,  d  May  21,  1659. 

BATHSHEBA— b  Sep  28,  1640,  m  June  27,  1664,  (1)  John  Leavitt 
and  (2)  Joseph  Turner  of  Scituate,  R.  I.,  and  had  Joseph. 

ISRAEL — b  June  29,  1642,  d  Apl  4,  175 1,  m  Dec  30,  166S,  Sarah 
Wetherill;  his  house  burned  Apl  20,  1676,  and  he  removed  to  Scituate; 
shipbuilder  there  in  1677.  Children — Sarah,  Nathaniel,  Rebecca, 
Nathan,  Abigail  (d  y),  Jael,  Israel  (d  y),  Abigail,  and  Israel. 

JAEL — b  Dec  28,  1643,  d  Apl  4,  1730,  m  May  25,  1664,  Joseph  Brad- 
ford, fourth  son  of  Governor  Bradford;  lived  in  Kingston  (Plymouth) 
on  Jones  River  at  a  place  called  Flat-House  Dock.  Children — Three 
girls  and  four  boys,  names  unknown. 

GERSHOM— b  Dec,  1645,  d  in  Groton  Dec  19,  1707  (H.  U.  1667), 
freeman  Oct  8,  1662,  m  Apl  26,  1675,  Sarah  Aldus  (d  Apl  14,  17 12),  dau 
Deacon  John  and  Sarah  (Eliot)  Aldus  of  Dedham.  GERSHOM  was  a 
famous  and  popular  divine  at  Groton.  Children — Gershom,  Shebuel, 
Rebecca  (bap  Dec  9,  1677,  in  Old  South  Church,  Boston),  Nehemiah, 
Joanna,  Peter,  Hepzibah  and  Ruth. 

JAPHET— b  Apl,  1647  (H.  U.  1667);  he  sailed  for  England  in  1670 
as  a  surgeon,  bound  for  East  Indies,  and  was  lost  at  sea;  or,  as  one  tra- 
dition states  it,  he  turn,ed  Catholic,  became  famous,  and  died  a  Cardinal 
at  Rome. 

NEHEMIAH— b  Nov  21,  1648,  d  Aug  25,  17 12  (H.  IT.  1667),  m  Mch 
21,  1678,  Sarah  Jackson  (d  Feb,  17 12),  dau  Edward  and  Elizabeth  (Oliver) 
Jackson.  He  succeeded  Rev.  John  Eliot,  Jr.,  Oct  13,  1668,  to  his  charge 
and  began  preaching  in  Cambridge  June  1,  1672;  he  was  a  noted  peace- 
maker and  healer  of  dissensions  among  disputants  and  often  was  jocu- 
larly called  "the  repairer  of  breaches."  Children — Elizabeth,  Rebecca, 
Mary,  Abigail,  Sarah,  and  Hannah. 


156 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


DAVID— b  Aug  7,  1651,  d  Aug  21,  1717,111  June,  1680,  Joanna  Quincy 
(d  May  18,  1695),  dau  Edmund  Quincy.  Children— Judith  (m  Nov  7, 
1699,  Obadiah  Emmons),  Peter,  Abiel,  Jael,  Deborah,  and  Rebecca. 
He  was  a  representative  from  Hingham  in  1692  and  1696.  DAVID 
afterward  m  (2)  Sarah  Joyce  of  Boston,  d  Oct  14,  1729,  and  had  Joseph, 
David,  Sarah,  LyDiA  and  Noah. 

REBECCA— b  Apl,  1654,  d  Apl  8,  1727,  at  Stonington,  Ct.  She  be- 
came Oct  10,  1679,  second  wife  of  Daniel  Mason  (d  1736),  of  Stonington, 
formerly  a  schoolmaster  at  Norwich;  they  had  seven  children,  one  of 
whom,  Peter  m  July  8,  1703,  Mary  Hobart  and  lived  in  (1)  Stonington, 
(2)  Colchester,  now  Salem,  (3)  New  London. 

ABIGAIL— b  Oct  19,  1656,  d  unm  Apl  12,  1683. 

LVDIA— b  Jan  17,  1659,  d  Oct  18,  1732,  became  Nov  13,  1690,  second 
wife  of  Capt  Thomas  Lincoln. 


THOMAS,  third  son  of  Edmund  Hobart,  Sr.,  born  in  England  (pos- 
sibly Wymondham)  in  1606,  died  in  Hingham,  Mass,  Aug  18,  1689, 
came  to  Charlestown,  Mass,  in  1633  with  his  wife  and  two  children,  Caleb 
and  Hannah.  A  certified  copy  of  his  marriage  from  Rev.  Robert  Eden, 
Vicar  of  Wymondham,  Norfolk,  England,  dated  October  17,  1890,  reads 
as  follows,  viz. :  "  The  register  witnesses  the  marriage  of  Thomas  Hub- 
bard [not  Hobart]  and  Anne  Ptomer,  both  single,  June  2,  1629." 
THOMAS  was  admitted  freeman  May  14,  1634,  removed  to  Hingham 
in  1635  and  was  granted  land  in  1636.  He  owned  a  10-acre  lot  there 
in  1637,  and  was  also  a  member,  with  his  brothers  Edmund  and  Joshua, 
of  the  famous  "train  band"  that,  being  so  turbulent  and  troubled  with 
internal  dissensions,  "caused  grave  concern  to  the  Governor  and  the 
magistrates  at  Boston."  THOMAS  paid  June  28,  1645,  £2  for  his  par- 
ticipation in  this  "sedition."  Children— Caleb,  Hannah,  Joshua, 
Thomas,  Isaac,  Moses,  Aaron,  and  Nathaniel. 

CHILDREN  AND  DESCENDANTS  OF  THOMAS  HUBBARD 
(OR  HOBART)  AND  ANNE  PTOMER. 

CALEB— ("In  the  Register  of  Baptisms— 1630— is  found:  'Caleb, 
films,  HUBBARD,'  "  Signed— Robert  Eden,  Vicar  of  Wymondham, 
Norfolk,  Eng,  Oct  17,  1890.)  CALEB  was  dismissed  from  the  Hingham 
Church  and  received  into  the  Braintree  Church  May  22,  1697,  and  died 
Sep  4,  171 1.  He  first  married,  Jan  20, 1657,  Elizabeth  Church,  who  died 
Feb  3,  1659,  and  he  then  married  Mary  Eliot  of  Braintree,  daughter  of 
Francis  Eliot  and  niece  of  John  Eliot,  the  Indian  Apostle.  She  died 
July   22,  1675,  and  he  married  then,    Jan    15,   1676,   Elizabeth  Faxon, 


EDMUND  HO  BART,    OF  H INGHAM,  MASS.  l5? 

widow  of  Richard  Faxon.  She  died  Sept  4,  1711,  leaving  seven 
children,  of  whom  the  youngest  was  Benjamin  (b  at  Braintree,  Mass, 
Apl  13,  1677,  and  buried  Sept  19,  17 18,  m  at  Braintree  Apl  5,  1699, 
Susannah  Newcomb  (b  June  22,  1673,  d  Dec  23,  1725),  dau  of  Peter  and 
Susan  (Cutting)  Newcomb,  and  gr  dau  of  Francis  and  Rachel  Newcomb, 
who  arrived  at  Boston  in  Apr,  1635,  in  the  ship  "  Planter"  from  Lon- 
don. Francis  Newcomb  d  May  27,  1692,  at  100  yrs.  CALEB'S  estate, 
inventoried  at  ^674.  13.  6.  was  to  be  divided  among  Benjamin,  Caleb, 
Susanna,  Peter,  Israel,  and. Joshua.  HANNAH — ("In  the  Register  of 
Baptisms — 1632 — is  found:  'HANNAH,  daughter  of  Thomas  Hub- 
bard.'" vSigned — Robert  Eden,  etc.  She  married  July  16,  1677,  John 
Record  of  Weymouth.  JOSHUA — Feb  24,  1639,  d  in  Braintree,  Mass., 
Dec  28,  17 13.  THOMAS — b  Oct  28,  1649  (may  have  settled  in  Boston). 
ISAAC— b  Apl  25,  1653.  MOSES— b  Dec  2,  1656,  d  in  Boston  Oct  28, 
16S6.  NATHANIEL— b  May  25,  1665,  m  May  31,  1695,  Mary  Stowell. 
AARON — b  in  Hingham  June  20,  166 1,  was  drowned  Mch  3,  1705,  while 

"  sailing  towards  Boston."    He  married  Rebecca ,  and  had,  among 

other  children,  Aaron,  Thomas,  and  Q1  Isaac  (see  following). 

G1  ISAAC,  son  of  Aaron  and  Rebecca  Hobart,  was  born  in  Hingham 
July  15,  1700,  and  died  in  Abington,  Mass.,  in  1775,  to  which  place  he 
removed  in  1774.  He  was  a  man  of  exemplary  habits,  an  enterprising 
farmer,  and  married  in  1774  Mary  Harden,  daughter  of  John  Harden, 
and  had  Thomas  (b  1725,  m  and  lived  in  Pembroke  (now  Hanson)  and 
had  eight  married  daughters  and  Isaac  and  Thomas,  the  latter  marrying 

Waterman  and  dying,  with  his  wife,  prior  to  1665,  a  prominent 

manufacturer),  Mary  (b  1735),  John  (b  1738),  6*  Aaron  (see  following). 

G2  AARON  (Col.),  son  of  Isaac  and  Mary  (Harden)  Hobart,  b  in 
Abington  in  1729,  m  Nov  5,  1753,  Elizabeth  Pilsbury,  dau  Jacob  Pilsbury. 
He  was  the  first  manufacturer  of  brass  cannon  in  America,  and  owned 
18,000  acres  of  land  in  Maine.  Children — Jacob  (b  Aug  5,  1754,  d  Dec  20, 
1772),  Seth  (b  Sep  4,  1755,  d  1813,  lived  in  East  Bridgewater,  m  in  1782 
Esther  Allen,  d  18 14,  dau  Jonathan  Allen  of  Braintree,  and  had  Betsy  b 
1783,  Jacob  b  1784,  Jonathan  b  17S6,  Seth  b  178S,  Polly  b  1790,  Eunice  b 
l195,J°svph  b  1796,  Esther  b  1798,  m  Micah  White,  and  Allen  b  1S01), 
Nathaniel  (b  Oct  15,  175S,  d  June  23,  1838,  m  and  had  two  children), 
Elizabeth  (b  Feb  5,  1761,  d  1842,  m  Feb  1777,  Dr.  David  Jones  who  rem 
to  North  Yarmouth,  Me.,  Oct  17,  1783,  surgeon  at  Bunker  Hill  under 
Gen.  Joseph  Warren,  M.  D.,  his  preceptor;  they  had  Mary.  Jacob  H., 
Betsy,  Sarah,  David,  Esther,  Abigail  G.,Jane  T,  Elias,  and  three  d  y), 
Aaron  (b  Aug  9,  1764,  d  Jan  9,  1818,  m  Susannah  Adams  b  Dec  7,  1766, 
d  Dec  31,  1826,  dau  Elihu  Adams  of  Braintree,  bro  President  John 
Adams;   they  had  Eli  hit   b  Dec,  1785,  d  Sep,    1842,  m  Sally  Dyer,  dau 


158 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Christopher  Dyer,  and  had  Sarah,  Eliza,  and  Elihu;  Aaron  b  June,  1787, 
d  Sep,  1858,  M.  C.  and  Judge  Probate,  m  Maria  Leach,  dau  Andrew 
Leach',  and  had  Susan,  Aaron,  George,  Maria,  Edward,  John,  and  Cath- 
erine; Susannah  b  Mch,  1789,  m  (1)  Zebah  Hayden,  (2)  Jared  Whitman 
and  had  Caroline  H.,  Augustus,  Jared,  Susan  H.,  and  Ephraim;    Sarah 
b  June,  1791,  d  May,  1826,  m  John  S.  Champney  and  had  John;  Abigail 
Adams  b  June,  1793,  d  1853,  m  John  S.  Champney  and  had  Nathaniel, 
Aaron,  Sarah,  and  Abbe;  and  Eliza  b  Jan,  1800,  d  Dec,  1800),  Sarah  (b 
June  13,  1770,  d  Jan  7,  1791,  m  Asa  Lewis  and  had  Susannah  Cushman 
and  infant  dau),  Isaac  (b  Sep  1,  1771,  d  in  Eastport,  Me.,  Feb  26,  1847, 
m  July  17,  1794,  Joanna  Hersey,  b  in  Hingham  Mch  1,  1776,  d  in  Ed- 
munds, Me.,  May  21,  1S58;  settled  1792  in  Edmunds  and  had  Aaron  b 
July  31,  1795,  m   (1)   Mary  Kilby  (2)   Catherine    Eastman    and  had  9 
children;  Isaac  b  Aug  13,  1797,  m  (1)  Abigail  Jones  (2)  Jane  Jones  and 
had  9  children;  Joanna  b  July  12,  1799,  d  July  26,  1848,  m  Daniel  Kilby, 
who  d  i860,  and  had  6  children;  Benjamin  b  Apl  11,  1803,  m  (1)  Emily 
Haywood  (2)  Mary  Mayhew  and  had  7  children;  and  Sarah  Jones  b  Sep 
x6,   1806,  m   Heman   Nickerson    and  had    11    children).     Col  AARON 
HOBART  then  married  Nov  25,  1777,  Mrs  Thankful  Adams  (b  May  25, 
1747;    she   had  by  Adams,  John,  Elisha,  and   Susannah),  widow   Elihu 
Adams,  bro  President  John  Adams.     Children— Adams  (b  Dec  3,  1779,  d 
Apl  14/1783),  Joseph  (b  Oct  24, 1781,  d  Aug  1, 1787),  Benjamin,  A.  M.  (b  Oct 
24,  1 78 1,  Brown  Univ  1804,  a  prominent  manufacturer  of  tacks  in  South 
Abington,  historian,  genealogist,  and  close  observer  of  America's  prog- 
ress.    He  m  Oct  4,  181 1   (1)  Lucy  Lazell  b  1785,  d  Sep  19,  181 2,  of  East 
Bridge  water,  dau  Gen  Sylvanus  Lazell,  no  children;  he  then  m  Jan  22, 
17 15,  (2)  Deborah  Lazell  of  Cummungton,  dau  Edmund  and  Mary  (Ford) 
Lazell,  and  had  Edmund,  b  Oct  29,  1815,  d  Apl  27,  1824;  Lucy  Lazell  b 
Oct  4,  1817,  m  (1)  Richard  Bridge  Carter  and  had  4  children  (2)  widower 
William  J.  Cutler;  Amelia  b  Mch  23,  1820,  m  William  H.  Dunbar  and 
had  3  children;    Benjamin  b  Feb   17,   1822,  m  Dec  22,  1863,  Mary  A. 
Webb  of  England  and  had  Mary  Isabelle;  Mary  Elizabeth  b  Dec  7,  1823, 
d  Oct  10,  1825;  Deborah  Ann  b  June  28,  1825,  m  Alden  F.  Dunbar  and 
had  5  children;  Andrew  b  Oct  16,  1827,  drowned  May  12,  1830;  Octavia 
b  Nov  7,  1829,  m  Nathan  Hobart  (see  elsewhere);  Joseph  b  Dec  3,  1831, 
m  Elizabeth  Hutchinson  b  Oct  6,  1834,  of  Philadelphia,  dau  Joseph  and 
Rachel  Hutchinson,  and  had  Grace  Lazell  d  y;  Helen  b  May  3,  1833; 
John  Lazell  b  Apl  14,  1836;  and  Mary  b  Feb  28,  1838,  m  Mch  5,  1863, 
James  Lockett,  Boston  merchant,  and  had  Benjamin  Carter  and  Madeline 
Lazell),  Salome  (b  Mch  20,  1784,  m  Marcus  Alden  of  East  Bridgewater 
and  had  Aaron  and  Susan),  Mary  (b  Sep  3,  1787,  d  May  27,  1858,  m 
May  7,  1812,  Henry  Brigham  and  had  Henry  H.,  Joseph  W.,  and  Charles), 


GOV.    RICHARD    DUDLEY    HUBBARD 
of  Hartford,  Ct. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford,  Ct.) 


T59 


HON.    LEVERETT    MARSDEN    HUBBARD 
of  Wallingford,  Ct. 

Ex-Secretary  of  the  State  of  Connecticut. 


1 60 


EDMUXD  HOBART,  OF  HINGHAM,  MASS.  ^i 

Thankful  (b  Mch  9,  1793,  d  May  10,  1863,  m  1S12  Daniel  Perry  and  had 
5  children).  Noah  (b  Mch  17,  1767,  d  Jan  24,  1854,  rem  in  May,  1804, 
to  Foxborough,  m  Nov  5,  1789,  Deborah  Winslow  Thomas,  b  1767,  d  Dec 
3,  1834,  of  East  Bridgewater,  descendant  of  Edward  Winslow,  and  had — 
(see  following)  G3  Henry,  ^Albert,  g5  Nathaniel,  ^  James  Thomas, 
G7  Aaron,  G8  Deborah  Ann,  and  G9  Jane  Talman). 

G5  HENRY — b  in  Abington  Sep  13,  1790,  d  in  Foxboro  May  24,  1862, 
m  July  17,  181 7,  Anna  Briggs  of  Norton,  who  d  Apl  18,  1836.  Children — 
Thomas  (b  July  30,  1819,  d  Aug  1,  1819),  Caroline  (b  Dec  24,  1820,  d 
May  22,  1856,  m  Nov  23,  1848,  William  Rawlins  Williamson  of  Cincin- 
nati, Ohio,  and  had  Emily  Rawlins,  William  Henry,  and  Jane  Taylor), 
Anna  Maria  (b  July  20,  1822,  m  Feb  5,  185 1,  Capt  Robert  P.  Holmes 
of  Wrentham,  a  navigator,  who  d  childless  June  1,  1856),  Henry  (b  Jan 
24,  1824,  extensive  tack  manufacturer  of  South  Abington,  m  Nov  2, 
1845,  Mary  T.  Burnap  of  Lowell,  dau  Rev.  N.  C.  Burnap,  and  had  Wal- 
ter Henry,  b  Feb  10,  1848;  James  Frederick  b  Jan  26,  1850;  Mary  Isa- 
bel I  e  b  Apl  12,  1852;  George  Burnap  b  Feb  8,  1854;  Anna  Caroline  b 
Mch  14,  1856;  Richard  Everett  b  June  16,  1858;  Emily  Florence  b  Mch 
18,  1861,  d  Sep,  1863;  and  Grace  Agnes  b  July  15,  1864),  Albert  Wins- 
low (b  Sep  6,  1825,  d  June  16,  1844),  Aaron  (b  May  31,  1828,  d  Feb  27, 
1832),  Harriet  Briggs  (b  Apl  14,  1830,  d  June  30,  1864),  George 
Williams  (b  Nov  4,  1832,  d  July  5,  1839),  Emily  Jane  (b  Mch  26,  1834, 
d  Jan  24,  1859),  and  Edwin  (b  Apl  11,  1S36,  m  Feb  19,  1863,  Julia  A. 
Noyes  and  lived  on  family  homestead  in  Foxboro;  and  had  Anna  Caro- 
line b  Dec  24,  1863). 

G4  ALBERT— b  in  Abingdon  Nov  8,  1792,  m  Dec  14,  1825,  Sarah 
Farmer  Jevvett,  d  Oct  9,  1838,  of  Ashburnam;  settled  in  1 810  in  Boston 
in  dry  goods  business.  Children — Albert  Jewett  (b  Dec  21,  1826,  d  Jan 
15,  1864,  served  in  45th  Mass.  Vols,  m  Jan,  1861,  Anna  E.  Smith  of  West 
Tisbury  and  had  Bessie  Jewett  b  May  29,  1862),  Sarah  Jane  (b  Jan  4, 
1829,  m  George  Papendick  of  Milwaukee,  Wis,  afterward  Boston,  and 
had  Ernest  Albert  Pcaskes,  Eleanor  Christine,  and  George  Christopher) , 
Joseph  Henry  (b  Dec  30,  1830,  d  Feb  8,  1833),  Ellen  Frances  (b  July 
*3,  I%33),  anc*  Edward  (b  Sep  15,  1834,  d  Oct  3,  1834). 

G5  NATHANIEL— b  Aug  30,  1794,  perished  Jan  13,  1840,  upon 
Steamer  Lexington,  running  from  New  York  to  Stonington,  Ct.,  there 
being  some  120  souls  aboard  that  met  death  by  fire  and  water  upon  that 
memorable  day,  four  only  being  saved.  He  was  a  believer  in  and  author 
of  a  life  of  Swedenborg  that  was  the  standard  authority  in  this  country 
for  a  long  period.  For  many  years  he  was  engaged  in  business  in  Bos- 
ton. Hem  Dec  19,  1827,  Lydia  Clark  of  Waltham.  Children— Nathan 
(b  in  Boston  Nov  14,  1829,  removed  to  New  York  City  in  1865,  and  is  a 


!62  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

member  of  the  firm  of  Minot,  Hooper  &  Co.,  Dry  Goods  Commission 
Merchants,  organized  Jan  i,  1840,  which  firm  has  both  a  Boston  and  New 
York  house.  He  m  in  South  Abington,  Nov  7,  1857,  Octavia  Hobart, 
dau  Benjamin  Hobart,  the  well-known  manufacturer  of  tacks,  and 
Abington's  historian  and  genealogist  (see  preceding),  and  had  Cornelia, 
b  Oct  26,  1858;  William  Dunbar,  b  Feb  5,  i860;  Mary  Lydia,  b  June  26, 
1863;  Victoria,  b  Apl  3,  1865;  John  Frederick,  b  Nov  30,  1866;  and  Clar- 
ence, b  June  27,  1870,  a  famous  American  tennis  player),  vSarah  (b  in 
Boston  Aug  25,  1829,  d  Sep  26,  1850),  Mary  (b  in  Boston  Aug  2,  1833, 
d  Aug  17,  1833),  Cornelia  (b  in  Boston  Aug  7,  1835,  d  Nov  26,  1856), 
and  John  Henry  (b  in  Boston  Aug  16,  1837,  d  Mch  1,  1S40). 

G6  JAMES  THOMAS— b  July  12,  i8oi,m  July  18,  1830,  Anne  Newell 
(d  Mch  18,  1847);  active  citizen  of  Boston  many  years  and  member  city 
council;  rem  to  Hawesville,  Ky.,  1838;  interested  in  coal  mines;  rem 
1845  to  Cincinnati,  thence  in  1S57  to  New  York.  Children — Harriet 
Whitney  (b  Jan  8,  1832),  James  (b  Mch  9,  1834,  d  Oct  13,  1837),  William 
Newell  (b  Mch  28,  1836,  m  1862  Anna  E.  Babbett;  prominent  citizen  of 
Cincinnati),  Anna  Elizabeth  (b  Feb  2,  1838),  Frances  Wells  (b  Dec  4, 
1840,  d  June  6,  1852),  Katherine  Lawrence  (b  Aug  19,  1834,  d  Feb  20, 
1854),  and  Henry  Lee  (b  July  26,  1845).  JAMES  THOMAS  HOBART 
then  m  Sep  23,  1850,  Sarah  Mann  Everett  of  Wrentham.  Children — 
Edward  Everett  (b  Sep  26,  185 1,  d  May  3,  1854),  James  Holbrook  (b 
Mch  5,  1S53,  d  May  11,  1854),  Everett  (b  Sep  1,  1855)  and  Clara  (b 
June  29,  1858). 

Gr  AARON — b  Oct  8,  1803,  m  Dec  22,  1841,  Anna  Mann  Brown  of 
Wrentham;  removed  1824  to  Charlestown,  S.  C,  returned  1830  to  Bos- 
ton and  there  held  many  public  offices.  Children — Caroline  Brown 
(b  Jan  9,  1843),  Arthur  (b  Mch  2,  1844),  Grace  Darling  (b  July  28, 
1845),  Aaron  (b  June  8,  1847,  d  Feb  6,  1849),  Annie  Mann  (b  Dec  12, 
1849),  and  Mary  Tyler  (b  Apl  28,  1858). 

G8  DEBORAH  ANN— b  Jan  29,  1806,  d  unm  Nov  9,  1859,  a  disciple 
of  Swedenborg. 

G3  JANE  TALMAN— b  June  28,  1808,  m  William  Cobb  of  Wrentham 
(d  Mch  2,  1865)  and  had  Sarah  Jewett,  Anna  Jane  and  William. 


JOvSHUA,  youngest  son  of  Edmund  Hobart,  Sr.,  was  born  in  England 
(probably  Hingham)  in  1614,  and  died  July  28,  1682.  He  came  with 
his  father  to  Charlestown,  Mass.,  in  1633,  and  was  admitted  to  the  church 
December  27,  1633;  made  freeman  September  3,  1634.  He  was  No.  53 
on  the  Freeman's  List  of  1635-6,  and  then  owned  "  2  acres  of  planting 
ground."  In  1637  he  sold  his  10-acre  lot  on  the  Mystic  side  of  the 
river  to  T.  Squire  and  T.  Ewer;  removed  to  Hingham  in   1635;  mar- 


EDMCXD  HOB  ART,   OF  H INGHAM,   MASS.  ^3 

ried  at  Cambridge  March  14,  1638,  Ellen  Ibrook.  He  was  deputy  mag- 
istrate in  the  General  Court  from  1643  to  1668.  June  28,  1645,  he 
prominently  figured  in  the  revolt  against  the  authority  of  Lieut  An- 
thony Eames,  commanding  officer  of  Hingham's  "  train  band,"  a  famous 
militia  organization  in  those  days.  Bozoun  Allen,  whose  cause  JOSH  U  A 
espoused,  was  elected  captain  in  opposition  to  Eames,  and  so  fierce 
was  the  factional  feeling  resulting  from  it  that  the  grave  magistrates 
at  Boston  were  kept  busy  many  months  in  their  efforts  to  quell  the 
agitation  this  disturbance  had  brought  into  the  community.  The 
"  Hingham  Mutiny,"  as  it  was  called,  occupied  a  prominent  place  in 
colonial  matters  in  those  days  and  made  the  warmest  friends  bitter 
foes,  threatening  alike  at  one  period  to  disrupt  that  prosperous  col- 
ony. Afterward  JOSHUA  was  made  captain  of  this  Artillery  Com- 
pany. For  his  activity  and  "sedition,"  displayed  in  this  insurrection, 
he  paid  into  the  General  Court's  exchequer  June  28,  1645,  the  sum  of 
^20.  May  8,  1656,  he  was  the  attorney  that  settled  the  estate  of  Wil- 
liam Vassall  (deceased),  a  prominent  English  immigrant.  Afterward 
this  estate  was  sold  for  ^120.  JOSHUA,  John  Cushen  and  Mathyas 
Briggs  signed  the  deed  of  conveyance.  He  was  the  Speaker  to  the 
General  Court  at  Boston  from  Hingham  during  the  years  1674-75-76, 
and  served  as  Captain  in  the  King  Phillip  Indian  War.  Children — 
Hannah,  Peter,  Sarah,  Deborah,  Joshua,  Solomon,  Enoch  and  Han- 
nah.    (Probably  all  were  born  in  Hingham  Mass.) 

CHILDREN  OF  JOSHUA   HOBART  OF   HINGHAM,  MASS. 

HANNAH,  b  Sep  29,  1639.  "  J657-S-29  [Oct  29,  1657]  Joseph  Graf- 
ton marryed  to  Hannah  Hobbard  at  Hingham  by  Capt  Hubbard. 
Joseph,  their  son  bo  1 7-6-1658  [Aug  17,  1658]  dyed  the  11  July,  1709." 
She  died  shortly  afterward.  PETER,  b  July  3,  1642,  d  on  the  Island 
of  Barbadoes  June  10,  1665,  where  he  went  for  his  health.  He  m  in 
December,  1662,  Susannah  Eliot,  dau  of  Jacob  and  sister  to  Peter  Eliot, 
the  Indian  apostle.  He  left  to  his  widow  100  acres  of  land  and  a  lot 
in  Boston;  SARAH,  b  Nov  19,  1644,  d  Feb  24,  1696,  m  June  26,  166S, 
(1)  Edward  Cowell,  and  (2)  Mr.  Cleverly;  DEBORAH,  bap  Sep  12, 
1647,  m  Apl  20,  1666,  Joshua  Lincoln;  JOSHUA,  b  March  22,  1650; 
SOLOMON,  b  May  28,  1652;  ENOCH,  b  May  28,  1654,  m  Aug  7,  1676, 
Hannah  Harris  of  Hingham;  and  HANNAH,  b  Oct  4,  1666. 


He  that  acts  as  he  believes,  though  he  may  act  wrong,  is  not  conscious  of  wrong—  Thomas  Paine. 


a 


ISAAC  HUBBARD  settled  at  New  Brunswick,  and  at  his  decease 
was  the  senior  magistrate  of  the  county  of  Sunbury.  He  died  at 
Burton,  in  1834,  aged  86" — From  American  Loyalists,  published  at 
Boston  in  1847. 

"DANIEL  HUBBARD,  of  Boston— An  Addresser  of  Hutchinson 
in  1774,  and  a  Protestor  against  the  Whigs  the  same  year.  In  1775 
he  was  an  addresser  of  Gage  " — Ibid. 

"  NATHANIEL  HUBBARD  went  to  St.  John,  New  Brunswick,  in 
1783,  and  was  a  grantee  of  that  city.  He  removed  to  the  Parish  of  Bur- 
ton, County  of  Sunbury,  where  he  was  a  magistrate  and  where  he  died 
in  1824,  aged  78  " — Ibid. 

"WILLIAM  HUBBARD— At  the  Peace  he  went  to  St.  John,  New 
Brunswick,  and  was  a  grantee  of  that  city.  He  settled  in  Sunbury 
County,  and  was  a  register  of  deeds  and  wills,  deputy  surrogate,  mem- 
ber of  the  house  of  assembly,  and  chief  justice  of  the  court  of  common 
pleas.     He  died  in  that  country  in  1813" — Ibid. 

REV.  BELA  HUBBARD,  of  New  Haven,  Ct,  was  a  mild  royalist, 
the  nature  of  his  ordination  vows,  taken  in  England,  vowing  allegiance 
to  his  sovereign,  was  sufficient  to  keep  him  neutral.  He  saved  much  of 
the  valuable  personal  effects  of  his  parishioners  from  British  capture  by 
hiding  such  in  his  church  in  New  Haven,  and  often  used  his  official  in- 
fluence to  prevent  overt  acts  against  their  persons  and  property  (see 
Prominent  American  Hubbards). 

JOSEPH  HUBBAP.D,  son  of  Elizabeth  and  John  Hubbard,  one  of 
the  early  settlers  of  Pomfret,  Ct,  had  tory  proclivities,  according  to  a 
family  tradition,  and  fled  to  Nova  Scotia— then  a  rendezvous  for  royal- 
ists—to avoid  participating  in  a  conflict  against  his  neighbors  and  near 
164 


SOME  HUBBARD  ROYALISTS.  l6- 

kinsmen.  Another  account  by  one  of  his  descendants,  of  more  value, 
probably,  relates  that  he  lived  on  a  farm  adjoining  that  of  "Old  Put." 
Both  continued  to  be  good  friends  despite  their  adverse  views  upon 
colonial  government.  "  Old  Put  "  advised  him  to  sell  out,  which  he  did, 
disposing  of  his  farm  and  farming  utensils  for  ^"1,000  sterling.  Taking 
what  household  goods  he  could  load  upon  an  ox  wagon  he  removed  to 
and  settled  upon  "  Tory  Hill,"  in  Salisbury,  Ct,  where  he  remained  and 
brought  up  his  family. 

JAMES  HUBARD,  Jr.  (son  of  "James  of  Gloster  "  [Gloucester],  a 
large  land  and  ship  owner  and  vestryman  of  the  Church  of  England), 
was  born  Feb  6,  1743,  and  known  as  "A  United  Empire  Royalist"  at 
the  outbreak  of  the  American  Revolution.  Partaking  largely  of  com- 
mercial benefits  by  maritime  trade  with  England  fostered  his  allegiance 
to  the  crown,  which  prosperity  he  imagined  would  decay  if  the  suprem- 
acy of  American  independence  was  established.  His  pronounced  sym- 
pathies caused  his  departure  to  that  country  upon  the  British  man-of- 
war  Fedowa  in  company  with  Lord  Dunmore,  Royal  Governor  of 
Virginia,  where  he  remained  until  the  war's  close,  when  he  returned, 
only  to  find  his  entire  possessions  confiscated.  He  then  settled  in  New 
York  City,  where  he  eventually  died  and  was  buried  in  Christ  Church 
Cemetery.  His  wife  was  Fanny  Morton,  daughter  of  Henry  Morton. 
Of  his  four  children,  Mathew  went  to  India  with  Lord  Cornwallis  and 
probably  died  there;  Frances  (who  was  once  engaged  to  Lord  Dun- 
more's  brother  and  eventually  discarded  him),  married  a  son  of  General 
St.  Clair,  Robert  St.  Clair,  of  Staunton,  Va.;  Charlotte  married  a  Mr. 
Griggs,  lawyer,  of  Jefferson  County,  Va.;  and  the  remaining  daughter 
married  a  Mr.  Bowyer  of  Lexington,  Va.  JAMES  HUBARD,  Jr., 
had  brothers  Mathew,  William  and  John,  and  sisters  Anne,  Elizabeth, 
Margaret  and  May,  one  of  whom  was  the  grandmother  of  President 
Zachary  Taylor,  who  had  a  brother  named  Hubbard  Taylor. 


HON.    CHESTER    DORMAN    HUBBARD,    M.    C, 
of  Wheeling,  West  Virginia. 

(Descended  from  William  Hubbard  of  Ipswich,  Mass.) 
166 


■d 


Ipswich  •  mass.- 


Civil  and  religious  freedom  go  hand  in  hand,  and  in  no  country  can  much  of  the  one  exist  without 
producing  a  corresponding  portion  of  the  other—  Charles  Caleb  Colton. 


WILLIAM  HUBBARD  of  Ipswich,  Suffolk,  Eng\,  was  born  in 
1594,  and  graduated  at  Cambridge  University,  Eng-,  in  1620.  He 
sailed  from  London  in  the  ship  Defence  in  1635,  "  Edmond  Bostocke, 
master,"  and  landed  in  Boston,  Mass,  Oct  6,  1635,  accompanied  by  his 
wife  (probably  second  wife)  Judith  (Knapp)  Hubbard,  daughter  of  John 
and  Martha  (Blosse)  Knapp,  of  Ipswich,  Eng,  and  six  children.  The 
shipping  list  of  passengers  of  the  Defence  reports  him  "  husbandman,* 
aged  40  years;  Judith,  25;  Martha,  22;  Mary,  20;  John,  15;  William,  14; 
Nathaniel,  6;  and  Richard,  4  years." 

He  bought  land  of  Thomas  Dudley,  Esq.,  to  whom  it  had  been 
granted  in  October  this  same  year  (1635).  Mr.  Dudley  had  erected  a 
house  upon  it.  This  parcel  consisted  of  nine  acres  "  lyinge  betweene 
Goodman  Cross  on  the  West  and  a  lott  intended  to  Mr.  Bradstreet  on 
the  East."  Another  parcel  he  purchased  consisted  of  "  twentie  five 
acres,  late  Goodman  Mussey's,  lyinge  betweene  John  Shatswell  and  a 
lott  late  Goodman  Cross's,  now  Mr.  Saltonstall's;"  also  "a  ten-acre  lott 
in  the  Reedy  Marsh:"  also  "  100  acres  of  Meaddow  and  100  acres  of 
upland  at  the  farr  meaddow  where  he  would  choose  it."  He  acquired 
considerable  more  land  later.  Some  of  it  was  on  Plum  Island,  Hog 
Island,  and  Castle  Neck.  Among  "  Old  Norfolk  County  Deeds  "  is  the 
following  instrument  recorded:  "May  22,  1657,  William  Hubbard, 
Senr,   of    Ipswich,    New  England,   in  ye  County  of  Essex,  gent.,  and 


*  Chaucer  defined  "husbandman"  as  "the  master  of  a  family."  Since  his  time  it  has  lost  that  sig- 
nificance and  now  means  a  tiller  of  the  ground.  William  Hubbard  was  undoubtedly  a  gentleman  of 
easy  circumstances  and  much  landed  estate  in  England,  and  left  there  because  of  a  sense  of  irritation 
to  his  religious  views  caused  by  the  unbearable  interference  and  restrictions  then  placed  upon  free- 
dom of  worship  in  the  old  country. 
167 


jes  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Judith,  his  wife,  to  Captain  Thomas  Wiggin,  of  Quamscooke,  in  New 
England,"  for  consideration  of  ^60  quitclaim  1000  acres  of  land,  more 
or  less,  consisting  of  "  all  yt  their  pcell  &  pcells  of  land  granted  them 
by  a  genl  Court  held  at  Boston  on  ye  fourteenth  day  of  October  in  ye 
yeare  of  our  Lord  1656,  containing  of  estimacon  1,000  acres  of  land,  be 
the  same  more  or  less;"  also  890  acres  "situate,  lying  and  being  uppon 
the  north  side  of  Quocheche  River,  about  eight  or  nine  miles  from  the 
Mills,  the  nuber  of  eight  hundred  &  ninety  Acres  in  a  pine  swamp;" 
also  no  acres  "on  both  sides  of  the  same  river,  about  three  or  four 
miles  above  the  mills."  (Signed:)  "  WILLIAM  HUBBARD,  Judith 
Hubbard."  Acknowledged  May  22,  1657.  The  890  acres  laid  in 
Whitehall  Swamp  in  what  is  now  Rochester,  N.  H.,  and  the  no  acres  in 
Dover,  N.  H.,  which  that  town  granted  to  him  prior  to  this  date. 

He  was  the  founder  and  principal  benefactor  of  the  Ipswich 
Grammar  School  in  1636,  and  gave  one  acre  for  its  site  (the  Cogswell 
School  House  now  stands  upon  that  acre).  He  was  made  freeman  May 
2,  1638,  and  was  Deputy  to  the  General  Court  for  six  years,  between 
1638  and  1646,  and  commissioned  in  165 1  by  the  General  Court  to 
"marry  people,"  not  then  a  clergyman's  prerogative;  "Mr.  Hubbert '" 
was  commissioner  of  Salem  Court,  1654-56;  Justice  of  the  Quarterly 
Court  in  1658;  and  "assistant"  in  1659.  In  1656  "for  land  granted 
him  in  1652  and  for  ^50  paid  by  him  in  England  for  the  country,  he 
has  a  grant  of  1,000."  In  1659  he  was  on  a  committee  of  complaints 
"  that  the  ministers  suffer  for  want  of  support."  He  removed  to  Boston 
in  1652,  and  was  considered  by  [Captain  Edward?]  Johnson  "a  very 
learned  man,  being  well  read  in  state  matters,  of  a  very  affable  and 
humble  behavior,  who  hath  expended  much  of  his  estate  to  helpe  on 
this  worke.  Although  he  be  slow  in  speech,  yet  is  he  downright  for  the 
businesse."  This  laudation  is  supposed  to  refer  to  him  when  he  was 
the  principal  of  the  Ipswich  Grammar  School.  He  died  in  Boston  be- 
tween June  8  and  Aug  19,  1670.  His  will  mentions  sons  William,  Na- 
thaniel, and  Richard  (but  not  John  who  must  have  died  previously) 
and  was  probated  Aug  19,  1670.  It  devised  a  considerable  portion  to 
his  son,  Rev.  William,  his  then  eldest  son,  according  to  the  English  law 
of  primogeniture.  It  consisted  of  houses,  buildings,  and  lands  in 
Tendring  Hundred,  which  is  in  Essex  County  on  the  south  side  of  the 
River  Stour,  separating  Essex  from  Suffolk  County.  The  language  of 
his  will  is:  "  My  eldest  son,  William  Hubbard,  shall  enjoy  all  my  lands 
in  Old  England  situated  in  tendring,  both  free  and  Coppyhold,  with  all 
other  houses,  buildings,  and  appurtenances  thereunto  belonging;"  also 
house  and  land  at  Ipswich,  "  together  with  a  parcel  of  meadow,  six 
acres  more  or  less,  adjoining  to  ye  land  of  Corporall  Whipple,  Cornett 


WILLIAM  HUBBARD,  OF  IPSWICH  MASS.  ^9 

Whipple,  and  Serjeant  Jecob,  purchased  of  my  cozen  John  Brown;" 
also  another  tract  of  300  acres.  Some  of  this  land,  in  Essex  County, 
England,  may  have  included  the  "  Maner  of  Bovills,  Little  Clacton 
(Devill  or  Dovell),"  which  was  owned  by  a  William  Hubbard  since 
1552;  then  it  was  the  property  of  "William  Cardinall,  gent."  This 
William  Hubbard  may  have  been  the  ancestor  of  the  William  Hubbard 
of  Ipswich  who  emigrated.  Children — Martha,  Mary,  John,  William, 
Nathaniel,  and  Richard. 

MARTHA,  eldest  child  of  William,  was  born  in  England  in  16 13  in 
(probably)  Essex  County,  and  died  July  13,  1689.  She  married  John 
Whittingham  of  Sutterton  (Southerton)  near  Boston,  Lincolnshire, 
England,  who  came  to  Ipswich,  Mass,  in  1637-8,  and  died  therein  1648. 
His  wife  MARTHA  (to  whom  he  bequeathed  his  realty  in  England 
jointly  with  his  eldest  son  John),  Rev.  William  Hubbard  of  Ipswich,  his 
father-in-law,  and  his  brother  Samuel  Hough  were  named  as  execu- 
tors. He  was  reputed  to  have  been  the  son  of  Daniel,  born  Nov  12, 
157 1,  living  at  Kingsgate,  Durham,  Eng,  in  1690,  Daniel  was  the  son 
(?)  of  William  Whittingham,  Dean  of  Durham.  (Some  authorities  con- 
tend that  John  was  the  son  of  Baruch  Whittingham.)  He  was  a  mem- 
ber of  the  Ancient  and  Honorable  Artillery  Company  of  Boston,  a  mer- 
chant and  part  owner  of  the  ship  Sarah.  MARTHA  (HUBBARD) 
WHITTINGHAM  then  married  in  1651  widower  Simon  Eyre  of  Wa- 
tertown  and  Boston,  a  surgeon  who  came  from  London  in  1635  in  the 
ship  Increase  and  figures  prominently  in  Watertown  (Mass)  annals. 
Children  (by  Whittingham)— John  (d  y),  Martha,  Richard,  William,* 
Elizabeth,  Judith:  (by  Eyre)— Maria,  and  John  (b  Feb  19,  1653-4, 
mem  Hon  Arty  Co  in  1682,  com  safety  1689,  representative  1693  and 
1698;   he  had  nine  children.) 

William  Clarke,  Boston,  Mass,  in  Oct,  1731,  wrote  the  following 
about  her:  "My  grandmother  by  the  mother's  side  was  MARTHA 
HUBBARD,  of  the  Ipswich  Hubbards.  The  family  was  very  consid- 
erable, she  being  in  England  brought  up  at  a  boarding  school,  and  had 
always  her  attendants  to  wait  upon  her,  and  in  those  days  wearing  her 
gold  watch,  which  was  worn  only  by  persons  of  distinction;  * 
and  I  have  often  heard  my  grandmother  speak  of  her  living  in  Eng- 
land and  the  meanness  of  her  living  here,  though  at  the  very  best 
rate,  but  would  flatter  herself  that  here  she  had  pure  worship  which 
they  were  deprived  of  in  the  land  of  their  nativity." 

MARY,  second  child  of  William,  was  born  in  Ipswich,  Eng,  in  1615, 
and  came  with  her  parents  to  Ipswich,  Mass.  She  married  Thomas 
Scott,  Jr.,  son  of  Thomas  and  Ann  Scott,  from  Ipswich,  Eng,  who  ar- 

*  See  will  of,  under  Nathaniel  Hubbard,  following. 


i7o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

rived  on  the  Elizabeth  in  1634  and  removed  to  Hartford,  Ct,  about 
1636,  where  he  died  Nov.  6,  1643,  "  by  accident,"  and  his  widow,  Ann 
Scott,  married  Nov  11,  1644,  Thomas  Ford  and  removed  to  Northamp- 
ton, Mass,  and  died  there  May  5,  1675.  Thomas  Scott,  Jr.,  died  in  1657 
at  Stamford,  Ct,  and  MARY  (HUBBARD)  SCOTT  then  became  the 
second  wife  of  Ezekiel  Rogers,  son  of  Rev.  Nathaniel  Rogers,  whose 
first  wife  was  said  to  have  been  a  "  Miss  L.  Paine  "  and  second  wife  Mar- 
garet Crane.  MARY  (HUBBARD)  SCOTT  ROGERS  died  in  1675, 
leaving  a  son,  Thomas,  by  her  first  husband,  and  Martha,  Nathaniel, 
John,  Ezekiel,  Timothy,  and  Samuel  by  her  second  husband,  whose 
death  occurred  July  5,  1674. 

JOHN,  third  child  and  eldest  son  of  William,  Sr.,  was  born  in  1620  in 
England,  probably  in  Essex  County.  Nothing  has  been  learned  of  his 
career  after  arriving  in  Ipswich,  Mass.  He  is  supposed  to  have  died 
within  a  short  period  after  his  arrival.  He  is  not  mentioned  in  his 
father's  will,  probated  in  1670,  nor  does  his  name  ever  appear  in  any 
legal  instruments  wherein  his  brothers'  and  sisters'  names  are  of  fre- 
quent occurrence.     It  is  a  pretty  safe  conclusion  that  he  died  before  1665. 

NATHANIEL,  fifth  child  of  William,  Sr.,  was  born  in  1629  in  Eng- 
land, probably  in  Essex  County.  He  returned  to  England  before  1672. 
This  is  proved  by  the  will  of  his  nephew,  William  Whittingham,  whose 
father,  John  Whittingham,  married  NATHANIEL'S  sister  Martha. 
Mch  25,  1672,  William  Whittingham  of  Sutterton,  Eng,  late  of  Boston, 
Mass.,  merchant,  made  his  will,  which  was  probated  in  London,  Eng., 
Apl  15,  1672,  and  a  duplicate  of  it  recorded  July  23,  1672,  in  Liber  7, 
page  224,  Probate  Records  Office,  Boston,  Mass.  In  this  will  among 
others,  he  mentions  his  mother  Mrs.  Martha  Eire  [Martha  Hubbard,  dau 
Rev.  William,  who  m  (1)  John  Whittingham  and  (2)  Simon  Eire],  father- 
in-law  John  Lawrence  of  New  Yorke,  in  America,  gentleman,  brother- 
in-law  John  Clarke  of  Boston,  uncle  Nathaniel  Hubbard,  gentleman, 
London,  Eng.  [to  whom  he  bequeathed  ^163],  his  "cozens  Mary  Hub- 
bart  &  Anne  Hubbert,  daughters  of  my  saide  Uncle  [Nathaniel]  Hub- 
bert,  ^5.  to  each,  to  buy  them  Rings."  He  appointed  as  executors  John 
Lawrence  of  New  York,  William  Hubbard  of  Ipswich,  Nathaniel  Hub- 
bard, and  John  Lewine  of  London.  The  inventory  is  a  long  one,  of 
household  effects  and  merchandise,  including  "one  negro  boy  at  ,£25," 
and  amounts  to  ,£666.  $s.  \od.  NATHANIEL'S  father's  will,  probated 
in  Boston  Aug  19,  1670,  thus  speaks  of  him:  "  To  my  son  Nathaniel  I 
have  already  given  a  sufficient  portion  of  my  land  at  Dover  Court  & 
otherwise."  These  various  references  to  him  seem  to  prove  effectually 
that  he  returned  to  England  and  lived  either  at  Dover  Court  or  in  some 
part  of  London. 


WILLIAM  HUBBARD,  OF  IPSWICH,  MASS.  171 

RICHARD,  sixth  and  youngest  child  of  William,  Sr.,  was  born  about 
163 1  in  Essex  County,  England,  and  came  over  with  his  parents  in  the 
Defence  in  1635.  He  attended  Harvard  University  and  became  B.  A. 
Aug  9,  1653,  and  M.  A.  in  1655.  His  college  bills  were  paid  (for  his 
father,  doubtless)  by  James  Oliver,  "mr  will  payne  of  Ipswich,"  and 
Joseph  Jewett,  according  to  Harvard  College  records.  He  married  about 
1658  Sarah  Bradstreet,  dau  of  Governor  Simon  and  Anne  (Dudley) 
Bradstreet  (a  brilliant  poetess  and  the  daughter  of  Gov.  Thomas  Dud- 
ley).  There  is  no  record  showing  when  he  was  made  freeman,  though 
he  was  a  deputy  to  the  General  Court  in  1660,  feoff er  of  the  grammar 
school  in  1665,  and  a  selectman  Feb  20,  1665,  and  up  to  Nov  2,  1680, 
when  he  was  made  chairman;  chosen  "  tithinman  "  Dec  20,  1677,  and 
possessed  of  right  of  "  comonage."  In  1672  he  is  mentioned  in  the 
Journal  of  William  Adams  (H.  U.  167 1)  as  having  given  "  several  scrip- 
tures to  consider  of  "  to  Thomas  Whitteridge's  wife,  who  was  distressed 
at  a  fortune-teller's  story,  i.  e.,  "  yt  she  would  meete  with  great  trouble 
if  she  escaped  with  her  life."  This  woman  soon  after  drowned  herself. 
"April  16,  1666,  At  a  meeting  of  the  selectman  Mr.  RICHARD  HUB- 
BARD, Cornett  Whipple,  Ed:  Coborne,  and  William  Reiner  [were] 
apoynted  to  run  the  line  between  Wennam  and  us,"  which  shows  that 
he  possessed  a  knowledge  of  surveying.  In  1679-80  he  was  on  another 
committee  appointed  by  the  General  Court  to  settle  the  boundary  lines 
between  Salem,  Beverly,  and  Wenham.  His  father  left  him  a  valuable 
farm  of  800  acres  at  "  the  Hamlet"  when  he  removed  to  Boston  in  1662, 
which  is  now  the  town  of  Hamilton.  He  also  owned  ten  "  double 
shares"  in  Plum  Island  in  1664.  He  was  one  of  the  27  richest  men  of 
the  230  freeholders  of  Ipswich  in  1664.  "Monday,  May  2,  1681,  Mr. 
Richard  Hubbard  of  Ipswich  Farms,  dyeth  suddainly  in  the  afternoon. 
Goeing  to  ly  on's  Bed  after  diner  was  there  found  dead  by  his  daughter 
accidently  goeing  in  thether."  The  inventory  of  his  estate  taken  June 
4,  1 68 1,  showed  him  worth  ,£1,457.  5s.,  which  was  settled  by  his  adminis- 
tratrix, Sarah,  his  widow,  who  afterward  and  by  Apl  12,  1683,  had  mar- 
ried Major  Samuel  Ward,  widower,  of  Marblehead,  who  had  a  son,  also 
named  Major  Samuel  Ward.  The  court  ordered  Sep  27,  1681,  in  the 
distribution  of  his  estate  "  that  the  eldest  sonn  shall  for  his  portion  have 
^260  and  the  rest  of  the  children  ^130  p.  peace,"  naming  Sarah,  Rich- 
ard, Nathaniel,  John,  and  Simon,  "and  the  rest  be  left  to  his  widdow," 
etc.  His  assets  consisted  mostly  of  real  estate,  the  land  records  in 
Ipswich  showing  a  large  number  of  transfers  between  him  and  others. 
Children— Sarah,  Richard,  Nathaniel,  John,  Simon,  and  William  (see 
following). 


lj2  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

CHILDREN  AND  DESCENDANTS  OF  RICHARD  AND 
SARAH  (BRADSTREET)  HUBBARD. 

WILLIAM — b  in  Ipswich  Nov  29,  1666,  d  there  Dec  15,  1666. 

SARAH — b  in  Ipswich  in  1659,  m  John  Cotton,  a  grandson  of  Rev. 
John  Cotton  of  Yarmouth,  who  had  six  daughters  and  several  sons. 

SIMON — b  in  Ipswich  in  1665,  d  there  before  June  28,  1685,  but  was 
living  Sep  27,  1681,  when  he  was  left  ^130  in  his  father's  will,  which  in 
case  of  his  death  before  marriage  or  issue,  or  before  reaching  21,  was  to 
be  equally  divided  among  his  brothers  and  sisters. 

NATHANIEL— b  in  Ipswich  about  1663.  When  his  father  died  in 
1681  Capt  Thomas  Ward  was  appointed  his  guardian.  Later  he  became 
a  merchant  in  Boston.  He  embarked  on  the  Brigantine  Swallow 
(which  was  bound  presumably  for  the  West  Indies)  and  never  re- 
turned. He  was  unmarried.  Letters  of  administration  upon  his  es- 
tate were  granted  Apl  26,  1699,  to  William  Clarke  of  Boston,  also  a 
merchant.  The  inventory  of  his  estate,  taken  Aug  3,  1699,  consisted 
of,  "Sugar,  ,£24.  6$s.;  cash  for  sugar  to  be  received,  jQn.  10s.  &d ; 
one-fourth  part  of  18  tons  of  Brasilletto  Wood,  ^"52;  17  yds  of  silk, 
£3.  8s.,"  and  other  articles,  amounting  in  all  to  ,£102.  $s.;  also  "one- 
fourth  part  of  a  Farme  at  Ipswich,  containing,  the  whole,  abt  150 
acres."  May  17,  1700,  by  Mr.  Clarke's  account  the  assets  were  ^176. 
8s.  6d.  He  paid  out  as  follows:  "  Paid  Major  Francis  Wainwright  a 
debt  due  by  bond  from  the  decedent,  with  interest,  ,£88;  paid  Colo. 
Penn  Townsend,  due  to  him  upon  charter  party  for  hire  of  the  Brig- 
antine Swallow,  ,£55;  paid  Col.  John  Appleton  nine  thirty-secondths  of 
the  adventure  sent  with  the  deed  in  ye  aforesd  Brigantine,  being  his 
part  thereof,  £,9.  gs.;  paid  Elizabeth  Hubbard  [his  sister-in-law]  due 
to  her  for  the  decedent's  board,  for  which  he  gave  order  before  he 
went  on  his  voyage,  ,£10." 

RICHARD — b  in  Ipswich  in  1661,  d  at  sea  in  1699.  His  uncle,  the 
Rev.  William  Hubbard,  became  his  guardian  at  his  father's  death.  He 
removed  to  Boston,  and  Nov  9,  1697,  m  there  Elizabeth  Clarke,* 
daughter  of  Dr  Johnf  and  Martha  (Whittingham)  Clarke.  Dr.  John 
Clarke  had  a  second  wife,  Elizabeth  Williams,  and  died  Dec  19,  1690. 
Elizabeth  Clarke  had  brothers  John,  William  and  Samuel.  After 
RICHARD  HUBBARD  died,  Elizabeth  (Clarke)  Hubbard  m  Aug  18, 
1703,  Rev.  Cotton  Mather,  a  well-known  churchman,  religious  historian, 

*  The  Clarke  tombs  are  prominent  in  Copp's  Hill  Burying  Ground,  Boston,  and  are  adorned  with 
eoats-of -arms.  There  have  been  m  direct  descent  seven  generations  of  John  Clarke  s  therein  buried  , 
all  were  physicians. 

t  lie  was  grandson  of  Dr.  John  Clarke,  a  famous  physician  of  Boston  who  m  Martha  Saltou- 
stall.  sister  to  Sir  Richard  Saltonstall.  He  d  in  Nov,  1064,  aged  C6,  leaving  John  and  Jemima,  who 
mai  lied  Robert  Lirew  of  Boston. 


WILLIAM  HUBBARD,  OF  IPSWICH,   MASS.  173 

and  prosecutor  of  witchcraft,  and  had  Elizabeth  and  Samuel.  She 
died  Feb  5,  1728,  and  was  buried  in  Copp's  Hill  Burying-ground, 
where  were  also  buried  Increase,  Cotton  and  Samuel  Mather.  RICH- 
ARD was  a  merchant  and  mariner.  Letters  of  administration  were 
granted  to  his  widow  Elizabeth  May  24,  1699  They  had  one  child  only, 
Richard,  born  in  Boston  Apl  14,  1699,  who  died  unmarried  at  the-  age 
of  22.  He  continued  in  his  father's  business  and  was  also  lost  at  sea. 
Feb  25,  1720,  he  made  his  will,  which  was  probated  in  Boston,  Mch  5, 
1 72 1.  It  thus  reads:  "I,  Richard  Hubbard  of  Boston,  in  the  county 
of  Suffolk,  in  New  England,  merchant,  being  bound  to  Sea,  and  not 
knowing  how  God  may  deal  with  me  in  my  voyage,  Do  make  &  Or- 
dain," etc.  The  will  bequeaths  his  "  Real  as  well  as  Personal  estate 
Two-Thirds  unto  my  well  beloved  sister  Elizabeth  Mather,  and  one 
Third  unto  my  well  beloved  Brother  Sam'l  Mather." 

JOHN— b  in  Ipswich  in  1664,  d  there  in  1747.  He  was  elected  Mch  8, 
1719-20  surveyor  of  highways  and  held  that  position  until  Mch  1, 
1734-5-  When  his  father  died  Capt  Daniel  Epps  was  appointed  his 
guardian.  Letters  of  administration  were  granted  to  his  widow  May 
6,  1747.  Feb  1,  1750,  the  inventory  of  his  estate  amounted  to  £^2\.  04, 
the  house,  barn,  and  50  acres  being  worth  ^250.  He  is  mentioned  as  a 
"farmer,"  "taylor"  and  "gentleman."  His  marriage  to  Mary  Brown 
of  Ipswich  was  published  Apl  22,  17 10.  His  will  reads  :  "  To  my  loving 
wife  Mary  I  give  the  use  of  one-third  part  of  all  my  Real  Estate  dur- 
ing her  natural  life;"  also  certain  personal  property;  "To  my  only  son 
John  Hubbard  I  give  all  Real  Estate  whatsoever  and  wheresoever;  to 
Richard  Hubbard  Dodge  and  Nathaniel  Hubbard  Dodge,  the  children 
of  my  Deceased  Daughter  Sarah  Dodge,  I  give  ^50.  p.  piece,  to  be  paid 
at  age  of  21  years;  to  my  daughter  Mary  Balch  I  give  ^80;  to  my 
Daughter  Elizabeth  Hubbard  I  also  give  ,£200,  to  be  paid  her  at  the 
age  of  21,  unless  she  should  marry."  His  son  is  made  sole  executor. 
Children  (all  b  in  Ipswich)— Sarah  (b  abt  1713,  alive  in  1783,  m  Capt 
Jacob  Dodge  of  Wenham,  gentleman,  whose  will  was  probated  Mch  4, 
1783,  naming  therein  children  William,  Jacob,  Abraham,  Prudence  who 
m  Abraham  Edwards,  and  Mary  who  m  John  Dodge  [no  reference  to 
Richard  Hubbard  Dodge  and  Nathaniel  Hubbard  Dodge,  mentioned  111 
their  grandfather's  will,  possibly  they  were  children  by  another  wife]), 
Richard  (bap  May  22,  17 15,  d  y),  Mary  (bap  Feb  23,  1717-8,  alive 
in  1783,  m  Mch  4,  1736,  Freeborn  Balch  of  Beverly,  who  d  before  June 

3,  1773,  and  had  Susanna  who  m Kimball,  Abigail  who  m 

Symonds,  and  Miriam),  Richard  (bap  in  May,  1725,  d  y),  Nathaniel 
(bap  Feb  19,  1726-7,  dy),  Elizabeth  (bap  Jan  11,  1729-30,  m  pub  Mch 
17,  1758,  to  Francis  Appleton  of  Boston,  descendant  (?)  of  Col  John  Ap- 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

pleton  of  Ipswich  and  Boston),  John  (bap  Apl  22,  1722,0!  insane  at 
Ipswich  May  28,  1785.  He  was  a  farmer  and  his  m  pub  to  Sarah  Wood- 
bury of  Beverly,  Mass,  occurred  Feb  26,  1746.  His  widow  was  alive  Aug 
30,  1790.  Inventory  of  his  estate  amounted  to  ^1124.  4;  they  had /a/;//, 
who  went  to  Sandwich,  N.  H.,  but  Sep  12,  1798,  he  was  living  in  Kit- 
tery,  Me.,  where  he  bought  for  $800  twenty-two  acres  of  land  from  Silas 
and  Mary  Fry;  no  record  found  of  his  marriage  or  of  any  children; 
Oliver,  bap  Sep  2,  1770,  in  Ipswich,  became  a  physician;  Lydia,  who  m 
Mch  13,  1776,  Billy  Leech  of  Moultonborough,  N.  H.,  and  afterward  of 
Marblehead,  Mass;  Mary,  who  m  Jan  20,  1774,  John  Brown,  Jr.,  of 
Ipswich;  Martha,  bap  in  Ipswich  Dec  13,  1772;  Sarah,  who  m  Aug  14, 
1784,  Moses  Adams  of  Beverly,  Mass,  will  probated  Nov  9,  1796,  widow 
Sarah  executrix,  inventory  $1,585.33;  Catherine, unm  Aug 30, 1790;  and 
Dudley,  b  in  Ipswich,  Mass,  Mch  3,  1765,  Harvard  1786,  d  Apl  26,  1816, 
a  prominent  lawyer  of  South  Berwick,  Me.,  studied  law  with  Daniel 
Davis  of  Portland,  Me.,  adm  bar  1789,  estate  administered  upon  by 
William  A  Hayes  May  20,  181 6,  m  Sophia  Dame— b  1772,  d  Nov  10, 
J828— of  Dover,  N.  H.,  and  had  Sarah  Sophia,  bap  Aug  17,  1800,  d  y. 
He  also  had  a  daughter  named  Olivia  Sarah,  bap  Dec  3,  1815,  m  Ben- 
jamin Nason  of  South  Berwick  and  had  Dudley  Hubbard  b  Jan  12,  181 7, 
d  Apl  6.  1819;  Benjamin  b  Apl  2,  1818,  d  June  11,  1819;  Augustus b  Nov 
28,  1821;  Mary  Russell  b  Jan  16,  1824;  Sarah  White  b  Aug  18,  1826; 
Charles  b  June  25,  1828;  John  Fairfield  b  Jan  24,  183 1,  and  Lucia  Wells 
b  Mch  14,  1884).  [It  is  not  probable  there  are  living  any  descendants 
of  Richard  and  Sarah  (Bradstreet)  Hubbard  who  bear  the  name  Hub- 
bard.] 

For  Descendants  of  Rev  WILLIAM  HUBBARD,  fourth  child  and 
second  son  of  William  Hubbard  of  Ipswich,  Mass.,  see  elsewhere. 


li£te^«:^t: 


What  are  monuments  of  bravery 

Where  no  public  virtues  bloom? 
What  avail,  in  lands  of  slavery, 

Trophied  temples,  arch  and  tomb?— Thomas  Campbell. 


This  Roster  of  Commissioned  Officers  in  the  Union  Army  during  our  late  civil  war  was  found 
among  the  manuscripts  of  the  late  Douglas  Hubbard,  and  is  printed  in  this  volume  that  our  posterity 
may  pay  homage  to  the  memory  of  those  who  placed  country  above  life.  Hundreds,  perhaps  thou- 
sands, of  others,  bearing  the  Hubbard  name,  who  served  in  the  ranks  and  yielded  to  the  same  spirit  of 
devotion,  have  not  yet  been  collated  from  war  records  for  various  reasons.  It  is  to  be  hoped  that 
this  will  be  done  at  some  future  period. 

HUBBARD— 

ALBERT  A.,  Captain,  One  Hundred  and  Tenth  Ohio  Infantry. 
Alonzo,  Lieutenant,   Ninety-Third  and  One  Hundred  and  Forty- 
Fifth  Indiana  Infantry. 

Alonzo  H.,  Lieutenant,  Twelfth  Indiana  Infantry. 

Andrew  J.,  Captain,  Sixteenth  Kentucky  Infantry;  died  of  wounds  at 
Morgania,  La. 

Augustus,  Lieutenant,  Ninety-Ninth  Illinois  Infantry. 

Augustus  M.,  Lieutenant,  Seventh  Wisconsin  Cavalry;  died  of  wounds 
at  Five  Forks,  Va. 

Austin,  Captain,  Seventh  Missouri  Cavalry;  died  of  wounds  a: 
Springfield,  Mo. 

Charles  A.,  Captain,  Ninety-Third  Indiana  Infantry. 

Charles  E.,  Lieutenant,  Seventeenth  Maine  Infantry. 

Charles  G.,  Lieutenant  and  Captain,  Second  and  Third  California 
Cavalry. 

Charles  H.,  Lieutenant,  Twenty-Third  Ohio  Infantry. 

Charles  M.,  Lieutenant,  Second  California  Cavalry. 

Chauncey  B.,  Captain,  One  Hundred  and  Fifty-Sixth  Illinois  Infantry. 

Clifford,  Lieutenant  and  Adjutant,  One  Hundred  and   Tenth  New 
York  Infantry. 
•75 


170 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 


Cyrus  C,  Captain,  Eighty-Third  New  York  Infantry. 

Daniel  C,  Lieutenant,  Twenty-Fourth  New  York  Infantry;  died  of 
wounds  at  Bull  Run,  Va. 

Daniel  R.,  Captain,  First  Connecticut  Heavy  Artillery. 

Deville,  Captain,  First  Michigan  Infantry. 

Edward  B.,  Lieutenant,  Second  Ohio  Cavalry  and  Twenty-Fifth 
Light  Artillery. 

Edward  L.,  Lieutenant,  Second  Battalion  Connecticut  Heavy  Ar- 
tillery. 

Edwin  T.,  Major,  Third  Wisconsin  Infantry. 

Elijah,  Captain,  Second  Missouri  Cavalry. 

George,  Lieutenant,  Third  Michigan  Infantry. 

George  A.,  Chaplain,  One  Hundred  and  Third  Ohio  Infantry. 

George  B.,  Captain,  Sixty-Ninth  Ohio  Infantry. 

George  C,  Surgeon,  One  Hundred  and  Sixty-Fifth  New  York  In- 
fantry. 

George  E.,  Lieutenant,  One  Hundred  and  Fifty-Third  Illinois  In- 
fantry. 

George  H.,  Surgeon,  Second  New  Hampshire  Infantry. 

George  M.,  Lieutenant,  Seventy-Third  Indiana  Infantry. 

George  N.,  Lieutenant,  Sixth  Illinois  Cavalry. 

George  T.,  Lieutenant,  One  Hundred  and  Thirty-Sixth  Illinois  In- 
fantry. 

George  W.,  Lieutenant,  Twenty-First  Maine  Infantry. 

George  W.,  Captain,  Fifth  New  York  Heavy  Artillery. 

Gurdon  S.,  Captain,  Eighty-Eighth  Illinois  Infantry. 

Henry  A.,  Captain,  Twelfth  New  York  Infantry;  died  of  wounds  at 
Wise's  Ford,  N.  C. 

Henry  A.,  Captain,  Twenty-Seventh  Massachusetts  Infantry;  died  of 
wounds  at  Wilderness,  Va. 

Henry  B.,  Lieutenant-Colonel,  First  West  Virginia  Cavalry. 

Henry  E.,  Lieutenant,  Ninth  New  Hampshire  Infantry. 

Henry  H.,  Captain,  One  Hundred  and  Forty-Seventh  New  York  In- 
fantry. 

Henry  H.,  Lieutenant,  First  Michigan  Engineers. 

Harrison,  Lieutenant,  Fourth  United  States  Colored  Infantry. 

Harrison  K.,  Captain,  One  Hundred  and  Nineteenth  Illinois  In- 
fantry. 

Horace,  Lieutenant,  Second  Battalion  Connecticut  Heavy  Artillery; 
killed  at  Winchester,  Va. 

Hiram  V.,  Lieutenant,  First  Wisconsin  Light  Artillery. 

James,  Colonel,  Second  Battalion  Connecticut  Artillery. 


GENERAL    LUCIUS    FREDERICK    HUBBARD 
of    Red   Wing,   Minn.,    Ex-Governor   of   the    State  of    Minnesota. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford,  Ct.) 


177 


GEN.    THOMAS    HAMLIN    HUBBARD 
of  New  York  City. 

(Descended  from  Richard  Hubbard  of  Salisbury,  Mass.) 


I78 


THE    UNION'S  DEFENDERS.  179 

James  A.,  Lieutenant  and  Captain,   One   Hundred  and  Thirty-Fifth 
Illinois  Infantry. 

James    H.,   Lieutenant  and  Captain,    Eleventh,   Thirty-Second   and 
Forty-Ninth  Wisconsin  Infantry. 

James  M.,  Major,  First  and  Twelfth  Missouri  Cavalry. 

James  T.,  Captain,  Forty-Sixth  Missouri  Infantry,  also  Provost-Mar- 
shal. 

James  V.,  Captain,  Thirtieth  New  Jersey  Infantry. 

James  W.,  Captain,  Third  New  Hampshire  Infantry. 

Jesse  H.,  Lieutenant  and  Captain,  Eleventh  and  Twenty-Second  Illi- 
nois Infantry. 

John,  Captain,  Third  New  Hampshire  Infantry. 

John,  Lieutenant,  First  Maine  Light  Artillery;  killed  at  Wilderness,  Va. 

John,  Lieutenant,  One  Hundred  and  Forty- Fifth  Pennsylvania  In- 
fantry; died  of  wounds  at  Gettysburg,  Pa. 

John  B.,  Captain,  and  Assistant  Adjutant-General  upon  staff  of  Gen- 
eral Weitzel,  Maine;  killed  at  Port  Hudson,  La. 

John  C,  Surgeon,  Forty-First  Ohio  Infantry. 

John  H.,  Lieutenant,  Seventh  Illinois  Infantry. 

John  W.,  Captain,  Twenty-First  Maine  Infantry. 

John   W.,    Lieutenant  in  Indiana  Company;  in   1864,  in   Maine  In- 
fantry. 

John  T.,  Major,  First  and  Twelfth  Missouri  Cavalry. 

Joseph   A.,   Captain,    Second    New    Hampshire    Infantry,   killed    at 
Gettysburg,  Pa. 

Josiah  M.,  Lieutenant,  Eleventh  Kansas  Cavalry. 

Julius  C,  Lieutenant,  Thirty-Seventh  Iowa  Infantry. 

Lester  C,  Captain,  Forty-Ninth  United  States  Colored  Infantry. 

Louis  D.,  Major,  Third  Illinois  Cavalry. 

Lucius  F.,  Private,  Captain,  Colonel  Fifth  Minnesotta,  Brevetted  Brig- 
adier-General 1864. 

Lucius  M.,  Lieutenant,  Thirty-Ninth  Ohio  Infantry. 

Myron  V.,  Lieutenant,  Thirtieth  Wisconsin  Infantry. 

Nathan,  Lieutenant,  One  Hundred  and  Sixty-Eighth  New  York  In- 
fantry. 

Nathan  D.,  Major,  Twentieth  Iowa  Infantry. 

Nathaniel  H.,  Colonel,  Twenty-Sixth  Maine  Infantry. 

Nathaniel  M.,  Captain  and  Brevet  Major,  Twentieth  Iowa  Infantry. 

Nathaniel  N.,  Lieutenant,  Sixth  United  States  Colored  Infantry. 

Perry  L.,  Lieutenant,  First  Michigan  Infantry. 

Philander    W.,  Lieutenant,    One  Hundred    and    Fifty-Fourth   New 
York  Infantrv. 


^o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Robert,  Surgeon,  Seventeenth  Connecticut  Infantry. 

Robert  G.,  Captain  and  Brevet  Major,  Sixth  and  Twelfth  Missouri 
Cavalry. 

Robert  W.,  Lieutenant-Colonel,  Third  New  York  Mounted  Infantry. 

Rollin  C,  Captain,  Fifteenth  Connecticut  Infantry. 

Royal  S.,  Lieutenant,  Fourteenth  United  States  Colored  Infantry. 

Samuel,  Captain,  Fifteenth  Connecticut  Infantry. 

Samuel  D.,  Captain,  Twenty-Seventh  Wisconsin  Infantry. 

Samuel  M.,  Captain,  Nineteenth  Michigan  Infantry. 

Silas  P.,  Lieutenant,  Thirty- Fourth  United  States  Colored  Infantry. 

Stephen,  Lieutenant,  Eleventh  Infantry,  Captain  in  Second  Massa- 
chusetts Artillery  and  Tenth  United  States  Colored  Infantry. 

Stewart,  Surgeon,  Seventeenth  Kentucky  Infantry. 

Timothy,  Lieutenant,  Sixty-Ninth  Ohio  Infantry. 

Timothy  H.,  Lieutenant,  Fourteenth  Maine  Infantry. 

Thomas  A.,  Lieutenant,  Ninety-Ninth  Illinois  Infantry;  died  of 
wounds  at  Hartsville,  Mo. 

Thomas  H.,  Adjutant,  Twenty-Fifth,  and  Lieut-Colonel  and  Colonel 
Thirtieth  Maine  Infantry;  Brevetted  Brigadier-General  1865. 

TheronT.,  Surgeon,  Twenty-Third  and  Thirtieth  Michigan  Infantry. 

Van  Buren,  Surgeon,  United  States  Army  (Ohio). 

Walter  D.,  Lieutenant,  Captain,  Major,  and  Colonel,  Thirteenth 
Missouri  Cavalry. 

William,  Captain,  Fifty-Third  United  States  Colored  Infantry. 

William,  Lieutenant,  Twenty-Seventh  Indiana  Infantry. 

William,  Lieutenant,  Twentieth  New  York  Cavalry. 

William  A.,  Lieutenant,  Seventh  and  One  Hundred  and  Thirty- 
Seventh  Illinois  Infantry. 

William  C,  Lieutenant,  Twenty-First  Wisconsin  Infantry. 

William  C,  Chaplain,  Thirty-Ninth  New  York  Infantry. 

William  E.,  Lieutenant  and  Captain,  Eighth  New  Hampshire  In- 
fantry, also  Captain,  Second  Rhode  Island  Infantry. 

William  F.,  Lieutenant,  One  Hundred  and  Third  Ohio  Infantry. 

William  H.,  Lieutenant,  Second  Massachusetts  Artillery. 

William  P.,  Lieutenant,  Third  West  Virginia  Cavalry. 

William  S.,  Captain,  Seventh  Indiana  Cavalry. 

William  W.,  Lieutenant,  Third  North  Carolina  Mounted  Infantry. 

Navy.* 
Daniel  B.,  Engineer  (from  New  Hampshire). 
Elisha,  Master  (from  Connecticut). 
John,  Master  (from  Maine). 
Socrates,  Lieutenant  (from  New  York). 

*  This  list  is  probably  not  a  complete  one. 


A  minister  is  like  a  Kahikatea  tree— full  of  fruit,  which  causes  a  grove  to  grow  up  around  it ;  so 
that  it  the  parent  tree  be  cut  down,  its  place  is  more  than  supplied  by  those  which  proceed  from  it— 
William  Tauri. 


WILLIAM  HUBBARD,  fourth  child  and  second  son  of  William 
Hubbard,  Sr.,  of  Ipswich,  Mass.,  was  born  in  1621  in  Essex 
County,  England.  After  his  parents  had  settled  in  1635  in  Ipswich,  he 
entered  Harvard  College  and  graduated,  a  Master  of  Arts,  in  a  class  of 
nine,  the  second  Tuesday  in  August,  1642,  in  the  first  class  ever  gradu- 
ated from  an  American  college.  He  also  studied  medicine  there,  in 
conjunction  with  his  other  studies.  May  18,  1653,  he  was  made  a  free- 
man. About  1646  he  married  Mary  Rogers*  (b  in  Feb,  1628,  alive  as 
late  as  Mch  25,  1685),  only  dau  of  Rev.  Nathaniel  and  Margaret  (Crane) 
Rogers,  formerly  of  Coggeshall,  Essex  Co,  Eng.  July  4,  1656,  he  began 
to  preach  in  Ipswich  as  the  colleague  of  Mr.  Thomas  Cobbett.  Nov  17, 
1658,  he  was  ordained  minister  and  began  then  to  make  himself  felt  in 
the  colony  as  a  scholar,  historian,  and  divine.  Until  this  period,  since 
graduating,  but  little  was  heard  of  him.  Many  of  his  sermons  have 
been  printed.  His  last  publication  was  entitled  "  Dying  Testimony  to 
the  Order  of  the  Churches,"  prepared  jointly  by  himself  and  Mr.  John 
Higginson  of  Salem.  Mch  19,  1677,  his  "  Indian  Wars  "  received  the 
approbation  of  the  colonial  censors  and  was  soon  published  in  Boston. 
Under  the  name  of  "  Present  State  of  New  England  "f  it  was  licensed 

*  Many  writers  in  referring  to  her  call  her  "Margaret."  In  all  legal  instruments  on  record  from 
Mch  20,  /G61,  to  1685,  she  is  called  "  Mary,"  and  Apl  3,  1662,  she  signs  herself  "  Mary  Hubbard  '  to  a 
quitclaim  deed  to  John  Appleton  of  Ipswich,  of  12  acres  of  land,  for  consideration  of  £f8. 10s.  It 
could  be  possible,  though  doubtful,  that  he  had  a  still  earlier  wife  named  Margaret.  Of  his  public 
affairs  we  know  much,  of  his  domestic  ones  but  little,  he  avoiding  reference  to  them  in  all  of  the 
numerous  papers  he  bequeathed  to  posterity. 

+  Accompanying  this  edition  was  the  first  map  engraving  produced  in  America.  It  was  highly 
praised  for  accuracy.    A  facsimile  is  on  exhibition  in  the  Old  State  House  at  Boston. 

181 


1 82  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

to  appear  in  London.  Mr.  Hubbard  went  over  early  in  1678  to  superin- 
tend its  publication  and  returned  in  October,  1678.  For  his  History  of 
New  England,  brought  up  to  1650  and  finished  in  1680,  he  received,  Oct 
11,  1682,  £50  as  a  "manifestation  of  thankfulness"  from  the  General 
I  Court.  £25  was  to  have  been  paid  to  him  when  "  he  procured  a  fayre 
■  coppie  to  be  written,  that  it  be  fitted  for  the  presse."  The  manuscript 
of  this  work,  in  several  handwritings,  is  in  the  Library  of  the  Massa- 
chusetts Historical  Society,  the  corrections  only  being  in  his  handwriting. 
This  copy  was  rescued  from  the  flames  in  August,  1775,  by  Rev.  Dr. 
Andrew  Eliot  in  an  attack  made  by  a  mob  upon  the  house  of  Gov. 
Thomas  Hutchinson,  who  held  royalistic  ideas,  and  presented  to  the 
Society  April  9,  1791,  by  his  son,  Rev.  John  Eliot,  D.  D.  It  is  quite 
smoky  looking,  and  also  brown  with  age.  The  Preface,  Chapter  1,  and 
nearly  all  of  Chapter  2  are  missing,  as  well  as  the  end  of  the  book.  As 
it  now  appears,  the  beginning  is  upon  page  9,  which  abruptly  reads — 
"famous  Prince  Charles  of  blessed  memory,"  etc.  Many  of  the  events 
in  this  history  were  taken  from  Gov.  Winthrop's  Diary,  for  which  the 
credit  was  doubtless  given  by  him  in  the  missing  preface.  Cotton  Ma- 
ther in  his  Magnalia  gives  him  credit  for  assistance  as  follows:  "Mr.  J. 
Higginson  and  Mr.  W.  HUBBARD  have  assisted  me,  and  much  obliged 
me  with  information  for  many  parts  of  our  history."  Rev.  John  Eliot 
considered  Mr.  HUBBARD  the  most  eminent  minister  in  the  county  of 
Essex,  Mass,  "  equal  to  any  in  the  province  for  learning  and  candour, 
and  superior  to  all  his  contemporaries  as  a  writer." 

Herewith  is  a  fac  simile  of  his  signature :        J?P  lilL^.    JUL.fr- 

July  1,  1684,  on  account  of  the  "sudden  visitation  by  sickness"  of 
John  Rogers,  his  wife's  grandfather,  President  of  Harvard  University, 
he  was  appointed  to  "  manage  "  the  commencement  and  confer  the  de- 
grees. The  day  following  "  the  Rev'd  Mr.  Rogers  dyed,  the  sun  begin- 
ning to  emerge  out  of  a  Central  Eclipps."  President  Rogers  had 
changed  the  date  of  the  commencement  to  one  day  earlier  than  the 
first  date  set,  after  learning  of  the  expected  eclipse.  "Wee  are  not 
superstitious  in  it,  but  reckon  it  very  inconvenient,"  he  said.  June  2, 
1688,  while  President  Increase  Mather  was  in  Europe,  Rev.  WILLIAM 
was  appointed  by  Sir  Edmund  Andros,  Royal  Governor,  to  again 
officiate  as  President  of  the  College  at  the  commencement  exercises. 
As  no  degrees  were  conferred  that  year  he  could  not  have  presided  this 
second  time.  In  1693  he  certified  to  the  good  character  of  Sarah 
Buckley,  wife  of  William  Buckley,  which  saved  her  life,  she  being  tried 
for  "  witchcraft,"  but  cleared  on  account  of  her  good  character.     June 


REV.   WILLIAM  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  ROGERS,     jgq 

26,  1696,  he  sent  an  important  paper  to  Gov.  John  Archdale  of  South 
Carolina,  treating  upon  the  immigration  of  Ipswich  residents  to  that 
vState.     "  March  15,  1694,  he  contracted  to  marry  his  housekeeper,  Mary, 
the  widow  of  Samuel  Pearce  "  (who  had  a  daughter  Abigail  Pearce  who 
m  John  Fiodgkins  of  Ipswich),  which  was  extremely  distasteful  to  his 
parish,  she  being  considered  greatly  below  him  in  station,  though  they 
"  would  allow  her  to  be  a  worthy  woman."     He  officiated  as  pastor  of 
the  Ipswich  Church  until  Aug  2,  1702,  upon  which  day,  according  to  the 
church  records,  "The  Rev'd  Mr.  HUBBARD  detained  the  Brethren  of 
the  Church  and  signified  and  declared  his  inability  [through  age]  to 
carry  on  the  work  of  the  ministry  any  longer  among  them,  and  desired 
that  they  would  take  care  and  procure  helpe  to  carry  on  sd  work."     May 
6,  1703,  he  formally  relinquished  the  pulpit  and  his  people  donated  him 
^60.     He  lived  near  the  River  at  a  place  called  "  Turkey  Shore."     Sept 
14,  1704,  he  died.     "  He  goes  to  ye  Lecture,  after  to  Col.  Apleton's,  goes 
home,  sups,  and  dyes  that  night."     The  town  of  Ipswich  voted  £32  to 
pay  his  funeral  expenses,  and  Oct   17,  1704,  the  proceeds   of  the  old 
meeting-house  (,£20)  were  added  to  the  original  sum.     His  widow  was 
left  in  indigent  circumstances.     At  a  town  meeting  held  "  March  ye  14, 
1709-10,  voted:  that  ^20  money  be  added  to  the  Town  rates  for  sup- 
plying of  Mrs.  Hubbard,  in  her  distressed  condition."     She  died  "Feb 
28,  1710,  [11]  aged  53,"  according  to  the  epitaph  upon  her  tombstone  in 
Ipswich.    Students  and  scholars  are  much  indebted  to  Mr.  HUBBARD'S 
patient,  painstaking  historical  researches  for  their  knowledge  of  New 
England   events   between    1620   and    1630.     He   toiled   ceaselessly  for 
knowledge — human  and  divine,  and  possessed  some  property  during  his 
lifetime,  but  his  liberality  caused  him  to  mortgage  much  of  it.     July  20, 
1674,  he  mortgaged  his  Ipswich  house  and  30  acres,  "part  of  Haffield's' 
farm,"  and  12  acres  of  other  land  for  ^324  sterling  to  John  Richards  of 
Boston.     February  14,  1664,  he  owned  7  double  shares  in  Plum  Island, 
Hog  Island,  and  Castle  Neck.     July  24,  1676,  he  had  an  interest  in  the 
land  and  dwelling-house  of  one  Thomas  Cowell,  and  Elizabeth  his  wife, 
living  near  Kittery,  Me,  on  a  neck  of  land  between  Spruce  Creek  and 
the  Piscataqua  River,  together  with  "  Granthum's  Island,"  the  consider- 
ation being  ^80,  "payable  in  merchantable   fish  within  four  years." 
This  property  afterward  came  into  the  possession  of  his  eldest  son  John, 
which  was  conveyed  by  his  son,  "  Nathaniel  Hubbard  of  Dorchester' 
Mass,  Esq,  as  administrator  of  his  father's  estate,  June  26,  1719^0  Elisha 
Gunnison  of  Kittery,  shipwright,  for  £35."     Children  (by  Mary  Rogers), 
Margaret,  John,  and  Nathaniel  (see  following). 

MARGARET,  eldest  child  of  Rev.  William  and  Mary  (Rogers)  Hub- 
bard, was  born  Oct  15,  1647,  and  died  Nov  11,  1716.     She  married  John 


1 84 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 


Pyncheon,  Jr.,*  a  distinguished  scholar  and  soldier,  who  ranked  as 
colonel  in  the  King  Philip  Indian  War  and  who  commanded  all  the 
Connecticut  Valley  troops  during  this  period.  He  was  the  son  of  John 
and  Amy  (Wyllys)  Pyncheon,  whose  father,  William  Pyncheon,f  was 
one  of  the  original  founders  of  Agawam  (Springfield,  Mass),  where 
John,  Jr.,  his  grandson,  was  Clerk  of  the  Courts  and  Register  of  Deeds, 
and  who  died  there  Apl  25,  1721,  though  he  and  his  wife  had  lived  pre- 
viously in  Boston  and  Ipswich.  While  living  in  Boston  MARGARET 
joined  the  Ipswich  Church  by  "taking  the  covenant"  Jan  18,  1673. 
Children— John  (d  July  12,  1742),  Margaret  (m  Capt  Nathaniel  Down- 
ing), and  William  (b  1689,  d  Jan  1,  1741,  m  Catherine  Brown,  dau  Rev. 
Daniel  Brown  of  Ipswich). 

NATHANIEL,  youngest  child  of  William  and  Mary  (Rogers)  Hub- 
bard, was  born  in  Ipswich  in  1650  and  is  thought  to  have  removed 
to  Boston  after  1680.  He  is  supposed  to  have  been  in  business  with 
his  brother  John  as  a  merchant.  Further  traces  of  him  are  lost.  The 
Ipswich  town  records  from  1634  to  1700  are  missing;  only  a  few  scat- 
tering ones  now  appear.  If  Nathaniel  died  there  at  an  early  age, 
which  might  possibly  be  the  case,  there  is  now  no  record  of  it  in  the 
town  books. 

JOHN,  second  child  of  Rev.  William  and  Mary  (Rogers)  Hubbard, 
was  born  in  1648  in  Ipswich,  Mass.  He  joined  Ipswich  Church  Jan 
25,  1673,  and  was  made  freeman  Oct  11,  1676.  His  talents  were  of  a 
commercial  cast,  and  he  soon  became  a  leading  merchant  of  Boston, 
where  he  and  his  family  removed  in  1680,  and  where  for  many  years 
during  the  latter  part  of  the  seventeenth  century  he  was  Treasurer  of 
Suffolk  County,  He  married  in  1671  Ann  Leverett  (b  Nov  23,  1652,  d 
Sep,  1 7 17),  second  daughter  of  Gov.  John  Leverett  and  his  second  wife, 
Mrs.  Sarah  Sedgwick.  Though  wealthy  at  one  time  he  died  insolvent 
Jan  8,  1709-10,  Children  (born  in  Boston  and  baptized  in  Old  South 
Church)— Mary  (b  Oct  25,  1673,  m  at  Boston  July  1,  1708,  Rev. 
Thomas  Ruggles,  b  1675,  of  Guilford,  Ct,  son  of  John  and  Mary 
(Gibson)  Ruggles  of  Roxbury,  Mass.  Rev.  Thomas  was  ordained  in 
1695  and  died  in  Guilford}  in  Dec,  1717,  (or  June  1,  1728),  leaving 
(Rev)  Thomas  and  perhaps  others),  Sarah  (b  Feb  11,  1674-5,  m  Nov  9, 
1693,  Francis  Booker),  John  (see  following),  William  (b  Dec  15,  1678, 

*  On  page  317,  July  number,  1894,  of  the  New  England  Historical  and  Genealogical  Register  is  copy 
of  an  interesting  letter  by  him  relating  to  the  King  Philip  War.  See  also  page  241  et  seq.  of  April 
number,  1894,  for  his  ancestry. 

+  At  the  surrender  in  Sep,  1664,  of  the  Dutch  Governor  of  New  York,  Peter  Stuyvesant,  to  Com- 
mander Richard  Nicholls,  agent  of  the  Duke  of  York  (James  II.)  and  afterward  Royal  Governor 
William  Pyncheon  and  Gov.  John  Haynes  of  Connecticut  acted  as  mediators. 

tMany  old  tombstones  are  yet  standing  in  the  East  burying  ground  of  this  family,  whence  they 
were  carried  upon  the  abandonment  of  the  old  cemetery  in  the  village  green  in  1817. 


REV.   WILLIAM  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  ROGERS.     ^5 

in  Ipswich,  Mass,  d  unm  in  Boston  1704,  a  goldsmith,  brother  Na- 
thaniel, administrator,  inventory  ,£59.  is.  iod.),  Nathaniel  (b  Oct  13, 
1680,  Harvard  1698,  d  1748  in  Bristol,  R.  I.  He  m  about  1707  (1)  Mrs. 
Elizabeth  Nelson,  dau  John  and  Elizabeth  Tailer,  and  Jan  20,  1725,  (2) 
widow  Rebecca  (Smith)  Gore  of  Boston.  He  bought  Oct  24,  1709,  21 
acres  and  a  dwelling-house  in  Braintree,  Mass,  of  Thomas  White,  for 
^180.  This  he  sold  Mch  2,  17 13,  to  Thomas  Vinton  for  ^192,  and  rem 
to  Dorchester,  where  he  owned  between  there  and  Dedham  210  acres 
valued  at  ^300.  He  was  called  "clerk,"  and  Mch  12,  1721,  Justice  of 
the  Peace,  marrying  a  great  many  couples  while  living  in  Dorchester, 
and  being  engaged  in  many  real  estate  ventures,  being  mentioned  Dec 
12,  1737,  as  one  of  the  proprietors  of  the  large  Muscogee  tract  in  Maine, 
and  also  manager  of  several  estates.  He  was  a  man  of  great  abilitvand 
legal  knowledge.  From  1728  to  1745  he  was  Justice  of  the  Supreme 
Court  of  the  Province  of  Massachusetts  and  a  Deputy  Judge  of  Ad- 
miralty, being  well  versed  in  marine  law.  He  removed  about  1726  to 
Bristol,  R.  I,  (then  Massachusetts).  He  had  children:  Elizabeth,  b 
1708  in  (?)  Braintree,  m  James  Munday;  John,  b  17 10  in  (?)  Braintree; 
Nathaniel,  b  17 12  in  (?)  Braintree,  m  Jan  19,  1764,  Hannah  Wiswall  and 
had  Susannah,  d  Sep  25,  1775;  Anne,  b  1713  in  (?)  Braintree,  who,  May 
10,  1742,  was  called  "spinster,"  being  coheir  with  Paschall  Nelson  of 
New  York  City,  gent.,  Robert  Temple,  gent.,  and  wife  Mehitable,  Mar- 
garet Steele,  widow,  Henry  Lloyd,  merchant,  all  of  Boston,  and  John 
Nelson,  late  of  Long  Island,  who  was  given  power  of  attorney  to  sell 
1,000  acres  of  land  in  Maine;  Sarah,  b  in  Dorchester  Dec  7,  17 15,  d  Apl 
5,  1716;  U  illiam,  b  in  Dorchester  Oct  24,  1717,  d  Dec  7,  1717;  William, 
b  in  Dorchester  Oct  26,  17 19,  d  Dec  2,  17 19;  William,  b  in  Dorchester 
Jan  17,  1721-2,  mariner,  d  Apl,  1746;  Margarct,h  in  Dorchester  June  2, 
1722;  and  Leverett,  b  in  Dorchester  Dec  15,  1723,  d  1793,  Harvard  1742, 
became  Justice  Supreme  Court  New  Hampshire,  m  Anne  Jeffreys  of 
Portsmouth,  N.  H.)  Richard  (b  Aug  27,  1684,  called  "merchant," 
"gentleman,"  and  "brewer;"  m  Oct  18,  17 19,  widow  Mary  Seppins,* 
who  probably  d  before  him;  will  probated  Nov  17,  1747;  letters  of  ad- 
ministration were  granted  to  his  daughter  Mary  (bap  in  Old  South 
Church  Feb  4,  1727-8),  spinster,  July  16,  1748;  inventory  shows  mansion 
house,  wharf,  and  shipyard  as  his  principal  possessions;  in  his  will  his 
"  loving  daughter  Mary  "  is  mentioned  (who  m  either  William  Lowder 
or  Nathan  Nevans),  also  his  grandchild,  Hubbard  Oliver,  son  of  Ami 

*  She  was  the  daughter  of  Benjamin  (mariner)  and  Hannah  (Savage)  Gillam,  dau  Thomas  Savage. 
They  had  Hannah  who  m  Samuel  Phillips,  Faith  who  m  (1)  Matthew  Middleton  and  (£)  Wentworth 
Paxton,  and  Mary  who  m  Richard  Huboard,  "brewer."  of  Boston.  Benjamin  Gillam's  will  was  pro- 
bated June  17,  168G.  Mrs  Hannah  (Savage)  Gillam  m  Sep,  1685,  Giles  Sylvester  and  d  previous  to  Mch 
28.  1739. 


!86  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

(bap  in  Old  South  Church  Feb  4,  1727-8,  m  Aug  8,  1745,  Edward  Bart- 
lett  Oliver,  b  17 19,  Harvard  1739),  and  Anne  (b  Decs,  1786,  m  Nathaniel 
Kay  and  was  living  in  Newport,  R.  I.,  in  1727). 

SON    OF    JOHN    AND    ANN   (LEVERETT)    HUBBARD. 

JOHN  was  born  in  Boston,  Jan  9,  1677,  and  died  in  Jamaica,  L.  I., 
Oct  5,  1705,  "a  most  amiable  man,"  a  Congregational  clergyman,  and 
the  first  divine  buried  there.  He  graduated  at  Harvard  in  1695,  and 
settled  as  pastor  of  the  Presbyterian  (?)  Church  in  Jamaica  in  1698.  He 
m  June  12,  1 701,  Mabel  Russell,*  only  dan  of  Rev.  Danielf  and  Mehit- 
able  (Wyllis)  Russell  of  Charlestown,  Mass.  (She  afterward  m  Rev. 
Samuel  Woodbridge  of  East  Hartford,  Ct.)  Rev.  John  was  of  gentle 
disposition  and  greatly  beloved  by  his  flock,  who  much  deplored  his 
early  death.  Children— H1  John  (see  following),  and  |i  Daniel  (see  fol- 
lowing). 

SONS  OF  JOHN   AND  MABEL  (RUSSELL)  HUBBARD. 

H1  JOHN  was  born  in  Jamaica,  L.  I.,  Nov  30,  1703.  His  father  dying 
when  he  was  a  child  he,  with  his  mother,  removed  to  Boston,  thence  to 
Hartford,  and  finally  to  New  Haven,  Ct.,  where  he  died  Oct  29,  1773. 
At  the  age  of  17  he  was  apprenticed  to  a  physician.  In  1730  the 
Rector  and  Trustees  of  Yale  College  conferred  the  honorary  degree  of 
Master  of  Arts  upon  him  "  for  his  eminent  attainments  in  the  Latin  and 
Greek  languages,  as  well  as  in  philosophy,  medicine,  poetry  and  belles- 
lettres."  He  was  for  many  years  a  Representative  of  New  Haven, 
Judge  of  Probate,  and  Judge  of  the  Court  of  Common  Pleas,  and 
was  frequently  mentioned  as  "Colonel."  In  1724  he  m  (1)  Mrs. 
Elizabeth  Stevens;  and  (2)  Mary  (Whitehead?).  Children— H2  John 
(see  elsewhere),  LeverettJ  (b  1728,  called  Colonel,  also  Doctor,  m 
Sarah  Whitehead,  lived  in  New  Haven,  and  had  Sarah,  who  m 
Judge  John  Trumbull,  and  Mary,  b  Apl  13,  1752,  d  Aug  n,  1 786,  m  Rev 
John  Lewis,  M.  A.,  b  1745,  d  Apl  28,  1792,  pastor  at  Stepney  Parish, 
Wethersfield),  Daniel  (b  Dec  24,  1729,  d  before  1773),  Elizabeth  (b 
July  3,  1731,  d  May  29,  1775,  m  Feb  10,  1757,  Rev  Ezra  Stiles,  Presi- 
dent Yale  College  and  son  of  Rev  Isaac  Stiles  of  North  Haven,  Ct.,  and 

*  In  York  County  (Maine)  Deeds  appears  the  following:  "  1707,  Oct.  13-From  Mabell  Hubberd  of 
Hartford,  Conn.,  widow,  now  resident  in  Boston,  to  my  two  children  John  &  Daniel  Hubbard,  in  con- 
sideration of  my  love  and  affection,  I  give  a  half  part  of  a  Parcel  of  Land  lying  on  or  near  Saco  River, 
which  was  given  by  the  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  my  Honored  Grandfather  Richard  Russell  of 
Charles  Town,  Esqr,  to  my  father  Mr.  Daniel  Russell." 

t  Rev  Daniel  Russell,  a  Congregational  minister,  b  1642,  was  second  son  of  Matilda  and  Hon. 
Richard  Russell  who  came  to  Charlestown  in  1640.  Hon.  Richard  Russell  (H  U.  1699)  m  a  second  wife, 
Mehitable  Wyllis  (b  abt  1658),  second  daughter  of  Samuel  and  Ruth  (Haynes)  Wyllis,  who  was  grand- 
daughter of  Gov.  John  Haynes  of  Massachusetts,  and  daughter  of  Gov.  John  Haynes  of  Connecticut 
and  his  second  wife  Mabel  Harlakenden.  of  noble  English  blood. 

$  He  also  had  Dr.  Nathaniel,  m  Phebe  McCleve  and  had  Alfred,  John  and  dau. 


REV.  WILLIAM  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  ROGERS.     187 

had  Elizabeth,  Ezra,  Keziah  Taylor,  Amelia,  Isaac,  Ruth,  Mary,  and 
Sarah),  William  (b  Mch  20,  1733,  d  y),  William  Abdial  (b  Dec  15,  1736, 
merchant  in  Boston,  d  there  August  28,  1786),  Stephen  Whitehead  (b 
Jan  16,  1747,  Yale  1766,  d  Sept  1,  1771,  m  May  15,  1771,  Eunice  White 
(b  Jan  7,  1749,  d  Dec  31,  1799,  without  issue,  the  widow  of  Capt  Joseph 
Bradley' of  N.  EL),  dau  Rev  Stephen  and  Mary  (Dyer)  White;  and 
Amelia  (b  1753,  m  Hezekiah  Silliman  of  New  Haven  and  had  16  chil- 
dren). 

SON  OF  JOHN   AND  MRS.  ELIZABETH   (STEVENS)  HUBBARD. 

H3  JOHN— b  Jan  24,  1727,  d  in  Meriden,  Ct.,  Nov  18,  1786;  graduated 
at  Yale  College  in  1744,  and  invited  by  Congregational  Church  of  Meri- 
den to  become  their  pastor  in  Nov,  1767.  This  call  caused  widespread 
discussion  throughout  the  State,  his  views  being  in  advance  of  his  time. 
An  active  minority  opposed  his  ordination,  which  finally  took  place 
June  22,  1769.  At  length  his  uniform  courtesy  to  his  opponents,  amiable 
disposition,  and  pleasing  manners  healed  the  breach.  His  theological 
views  accord  with  those  of  the  Cong.  Church  of  the  present  day.  He 
was  thrown  from  a  sleigh  during  the  winter  of  1783,  which  caused  his 
retirement  from  the  ministry  and  led  to  his  death  about  two  years  later. 
He  m  Jan  25,  1750,  (1)  Rebecca  Dickerman  and  (2)  Mary  Russell. 
Children— H3  John  (see  following)  and  H4  Isaac  (see  following). 

SONS  OF  JOHN   AND  REBECCA    (DICKERMAN')    HUBBARD. 

H3  JOHN— b  Jan  14,  1751,  at  Meriden,  Ct.,  d  at  Hamden,  Ct.,  1837. 
In  the  War  of  181 2  he  was  Major-General  of  the  Connecticut  Militia, 
according  to  "  returns  "  in  the  War  Department  at  Washington,  D.  C, 
which  are  dated  February  19,  1814,  and  November  10,  1814,  Norwich, 
Ct.  He  also  served  fourteen  days  as  private,  doing  guard  duty  under 
"  Old  Put  "  at  Horseneck  during  the  Revolution.  Though  professedly 
a  farmer  he  owned  and  conducted  a  stone  quarry,  saw-mill,  and  brick- 
kiln, and  filled  various  civil  offices,  being  Justice  of  the  peace,  tax  col- 
lector of  New  Haven,  a  chorister  and  afterward  deacon  of  the  First 
Society  (now  Center  Church)  of  New  Haven.  He  lived  in  an  old  stone 
house  that  was  supposed  to  have  been  built  by  his  grandfather,  Dr.  John 
Hubbard.  It  stood  about  one  mile  east  of  historic  Judge's  Cave,  near 
Springside  Home.  Through  attention  to  the  public  weal  and  neglect 
of  his  own  private  business  interests  he  became  poor  and  lost  his  landed 
possessions.  He  m  in  1775  (0  Anna  Atwater  (d  Feb  2,  1778)  and  had 
H^  John  (see  following);  m  May,  1779,  (2)  Martha  Bradley  and  had  a 
child  (b  Mch  1,  1780  d  y),  Anna  (b  June  15,  1782,  m  Jan  6,  1803,  Jesse 
Cooper,  and  had  Alfred,  Russell,  Anna,  and  Jesse),  Russell  (b  Oct  18, 
1784  unm,  educated  at  Yale  for  the  ministry,  became  a  great  traveler 


!88  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

and  circumnavigated  the  globe,  stopping  and  preaching  to  the  natives 
at  Benevulen,  Sumatra,  Calcutta,  India,  and  Mocao,  China.  1808-9 
his  ship's  crew  were  captured  by  the  Chinese  and  $100  apiece  was 
paid  as  ransom.  He  returned  to  America  by  way  of  the  Sandwich 
Islands  and  with  his  brother  William  afterward  sailed  again  from  New 
Haven,  Ct,  on  the  brig  Triton,  Capt  Daniel  Moulthrop,  for  the  West 
Indies,  one  as  supercargo  and  the  other  as  mate  of  the  ship,  which  was 
never  heard  from  again,  and  was  supposed  to  have  been  lost  on  the 
rocks  off  Bermuda  in  a  violent  storm),  William  (b  July  24,  1787,  lived 
at  Hamden,  Ct.,  lost  at  sea  with  his  brother  Russell  on  brig  Triton,  m 
Abigail  Heaton  and  had  Stiles  d  y,  and  William  b  Nov  1,  1811,  m  Oct 
11,  1832,  Nancy  Conaway  and  had  Anaretta  b  July  10,  1833,  who  m  Mch 
4,  1S57,  O.  K.  Elefrity  and  had  Emma  V.;  Asenath  b  July  23,  1834,  m 
July  4,  1857,  William  B.  Shields  and  had  Ida  May;  Henry  b  Mch  1,  1841; 
Agnes  b  Feb  10,  1844;  and  Joseph  Walter  b  Aug  14,  1853),  Dana  (b 
Aug  17,  1789,  d  at  Wheeling,  W.  Va,  Sep  16,  1852,  m  Oct  16,  1S11, 
Asenath  Dorman,  and  had  Chester  Dorman  (see  Prominent  American 
Hubbards);  Henry  Baldwin,  b  Oct  23,  1816,  m  Feb  25,  1841,  Emma 
Lewis,  and  had  Sophia  K,  b  July  25,  1842,  Emma  Lewis  b  Feb  23,  1846, 
Alice  Julia  b  Mch  21,  1850,  and  Henry  Dana  b  Oct  23,  1854;  William 
Dana,  b  Sep  11,  1S1S,  d  June  12,  1834;  John  Rogers,  b  Nov  8,  1825,  m 
Oct  9,  1855,  Lucy  Ann  Clark  and  had  Sarah  Dana,  b  Sep  14,  1856,  d  Jan 
14,  1859;  Martha  Dorman,  b  June  14,  i860,  m  George  Norman  Weaver; 
Lucy  Chapline,  b  July  29,  1863,111  Elbert  O.Duncan;  Mabel  Clark,  b 
Dec  10,  1867,  d  June  24,  1890,  m  William  C.  Shanklin;  Mary  Quarrier,  b 
Apl  22,  1870,111  Frederick  A.  Joss;  Anna  Gilkeson,  b  Oct  17,  1872; 
Chester  Dimock,  b  Oct  27,  1874;  and  Helen  Rogers,  b  Apl,  1879,  d  Mch 
7,  1880;  Martha  Rebecca  b  Nov  9,  1829,  d  Aug  4,  1832;  Gen  JOHN 
HUBBARD  m  (3)  Sally  Thompson).  H:%  JOHN— b  Jan  14,  1778,  d 
1837,  lived  in  Orange,  Ct,  111  Dec  15,  1802,  Sally  Peck,  and  had  Anna  (b 
Aug  24,  1809,  d  July  7,  1838,  m  Sep,  1831,  John  W.  Merwin),  and  John 
Peck  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line). 

H4  ISAAC— b  in  Meriden,  Ct,  Nov  22,  1752,  (deacon)  lived  and  d  there 
July  5,  1796,  111  Dec  5,  1782,  Jane  Berry,  dau  of  Thomas  and  Anna  (Mer- 
riam)  Berry  of  Meriden.  Children— Rebecca  (b  Nov  25,  1783,  d  Feb, 
1855,  m  Mch  18,  1802,  Deacon  Silas  Rice  of  Meriden  and  had  Ruth  Cur- 
tis, b  Oct  14,  1803,  m  Oct  25,  1825,  Lyman  W.  Hough  of  Meriden  and 
had  Silas  R,  b  Dec  19,  1827,  d  July  27,  1836;  Jane  Elizabeth,  b  Jan  23, 
1830,  m  Sep  4,  1859,  Hobart  C.  Hull,  d  Oct  4, 1893;  and  Ellen  Rebecca, 
b  May  7,  1833,  now  living  in  Meriden,  Ct.,  and  much  interested  in  Hub- 
bard genealogical  research;  Jane,  b  July  1,  1805,  d  Feb  13,  1824;  Silas, 
b  June  29,  1807,  d  y;  Mary,  b  Mch  9,  1809,  m  Joel  Hough  of  Walling- 


REV.   WILLIAM  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  ROGERS.     r89 

ford  and  had  Lucy,  Cornelia,  Joel,  Susan  Albert,  James,  Alice  and 
Rosalie;  Silas,  b  Apl  5,  1811,  m  Fanny  Brooks  of  Chatham  Co,  X.  C, 
and  had  Levi  Woodbury  b  July  2,  1S37;  Mary  Ameret,  b  Sep  23,  1841; 
and  John  Willis  b  Mch  8,  1844;  Phebe  Rebecca,  b  Sept  9,  181 2,  d  July  30, 
1 814;  Henry,  b  Nov  20,  18 14,  m  Emily  Lane  and  had  two  sons  who  d  y; 
Josej>k,bMch  29,  1817,  d  Mch  30,  1817;  Benjamin  Hulsey,  b  June  20, 
1818,  m  (1)  Mary  Ann  Bradley  of  Hamden,  Ct.,  d  1852,  and  (2)  Mrs.  Abby 
C.  Smith,  and  had  Mary  Ann;  Emily  Rebecca,  b  Sep  16,  1820,  m  Samuel 
A  Tuttle  of  Cheshire  and  had  Ellen  Eunice  and  Alice  Rebecca;  Hins- 
dale Silliman,  b  Apl  1 1,  1823,  m  Nancy  Munson  of  Southington  and  had 
Ella  Maria,  and  Emma  Jane  who  d  Nov  1,  1854),  Mary  (b  Dec  24,  1785, 
m  Ira  Hough  of  Wolcott  and  had  Isaac,  who  m  Laura  Ann  Johnson  and 
had  Mary  Aurelia,  Ann  Amelia  and  Hobart  Isaac;  Ezra  Stiles,  m  Lucy 
Minor  and  had  Cornelia  and  Caroline;  Ira  H,  m  Mary  P.  Smith  and 
had  Ezra  Stiles,  Harriet  Eliza  and  Emily  Smith;  Mary  A.,  m  Miles  S. 
Upson  and  had  Emma  Adelaide,  Mary  Elodene,  Miles  Evelin,  and 
Sally),  Thomas  (b  Jan  9,  1788,  of  Wallingford,  called  colonel,  m  Nov  28, 
18 10,  Lydia  Andrews  of  Wallingford  and  had  Maria,  b  Sep  11,  181 1; 
Betsey,  b  Apl  28,  1814,  m  Sep  18,  1839,  Deacon  Edmund  Tuttle  of  Meri- 
den  and  had  Harriet  Winslow,  Edward  Hubbard,  and  Mary  Ella;  Julia, 
b  Mch  20,  1820;  Charles  Thomas,  b  Sep  28,  1824,  m  Aug  18,  1859,  Mary 
E.  L.  Massey,  dau  Solon  Massey  of  Watertown,  N.  Y.,  and  Erastus,  b  July 

9,  1828),  Isaac  (b  July  7,  179°,  d  Feb  T7>  l8l2)>  JOHN  (b  AP!  2I'  I793'  m 
Nov  26,  1 81 6,  Eunice  Merriman  of  Meriden,  and  had  Dolly  Cornelia  b 
May  10',  1819,  d  Mch  24,  1824;  Isaac  Ives  b  Aug  6,  1S21,  m  Apl  26,  1846, 

(1)  Mrs.  Lucy  Hough,  d  Apl   ,  and  had  Jane  Ann,  b  Dec  8,  1846; 

he  m  Dec  14,  1858,  (2)  Sarah  H.  Paddock;  Eunice  Jannctt,  bSeps,  1824, 
d  Feb  24, 1825;  John  Stilcs,b  Aug  10,  iS26,m  June  25,  1848,  Hannah  Ann 
Lake  of  Newtown;  James,  b  Oct  15,  1828,  d  Mch  12,  1829;  Jane  Ann,  b 
Feb  13,  1834,  d  Apl  23,  1844),  Ezra  Stiles  (b  May  13,  1794,  lived  in  New 
Haven'  m  Eliza  Church  of  New  Haven  and  had  George  Boardmau,  b  Feb 
16  1822,  Yale  1842,  who  m  Aug  5,  1849,  Jane  Beardsley,  dau  Rev  William 
Beardslev  of  Illinois  and  had  Emily  B,  b  Sep  9,  1850,  d  Nov  15,  1853; 
William  B,  b  Nov  18,  1852,  George  S,  b  Feb  10,  1855,  d  Mch  13,  1856, 
and  Lillie  C,  b  May  n,  1857;  Joseph  Stillman  (see  Prominent  American 
Hubbards),  and  Elizabeth  (b  Sep  20,  1796,  m  Sep  12,  1816,  Ira  Mem- 
man  of  Meriden,  and  had  Susan,  b  Mch  12,  1819,  d  y:  Ira  Hubbard,  b 
Jan  31,  1824;  Elizabeth,  b  May  19,  183c,  d  y;  Eliza  Ann,  b  May  28,  1834, 
m  Apl* 5  1859,  L.  P.  Chamberlain;  Eli  Ives,  b  Jan  21,  1837,  lives  in 
Meriden,  m  Jan  19,  1870,  Mary  Ely  Miller,  dau  N.  F.  Miller  and  Nancy 
Humphrey  Ely  of  Bloomfield,  Ct.,  and  had  Mary  Elizabeth  Merriman, 
b  Oct  12,  1872;  Jane  Elizabeth,  b  Apl  12,  1840,  m  Dec  1,  1S69,  Henry  S. 


I9o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 

Wilcox  and  had  Albert  Henry,  b  Apl  28,  1872;  and  Henry  Stiles,  b  Apl 
21,  1846). 

I1  DANIEL  was  born  (posthumous)  in  Jamaica,  L.  I.,  April  3,  1706, 
and  died  in  New  London,  Ct,  March  24,  1741-42.  He  graduated  at  Yale 
in  1727,  and  was  tutor  there  from  1728  to  1731.  He  studied  law,  became 
sheriff  of  the  county  in  1735,  and  was  of  firm  but  deeply  religious  char- 
acter. In  1 731  it  is  recorded  that  at  a  town  meeting  he  was  elected  a 
citizen  of  New  London.  He  married  Aug  18,  1731,  Martha  Coit,*  b 
1706,  dau  of  John  Coit  of  New  London.  (Martha  (Coit)  Hubbard  mar- 
ried Sep  6,  1744,  Thomas  Greene  of  Boston,  whose  first  wife  was  Eliza- 
beth Gardiner,  dau  of  John  Gardiner  of  Gardiner's  Island.)  Children — 
Russell  (b  June  28,  1732,  m  Mary  Gray  of  Norwich  and  New  London, 
and  had  Mary,  b  1756,  m  David  Nevins;  Luerctia,  b  1762,  m  Daniel 
Tracy;  Elizabeth,  b  1764;  Martha,  b  1767,  m  Daniel  Wright;  Russell,  b 
1765;  Susan,  b  1768,  m  (1)  Ebenezer  Bushnell  and  (2)  Robert  Manwar- 
ing;  and  Thomas,  b  1758,  d  1795  ^n  New  London,  m  Mary  Hallam  of 
New  London,  Ct.,  and  had  Thomas,  b  1783,  m  Abby  Williams;  Russell, 
b  1785,  m  Abby  Coit  of  New  London,  and  had  Juliet  and  Mary;  and 
Amos,  b  1 79 1,  m  Eliza  Chandler  of  Norwich  and  had  Eliza,  Mary, 
Thomas,  James,  William,  and  Charles),  Lucretia  (b  June  18,  1734,  m 
Gregory  Townsend),  |2  Daniel  (see  elsewhere),  Elizabeth  (b  1738,  m 
Benjamin  Greene),  and  |3  William  (see  elsewhere). 

SONS    OF    DANIEL    AND    MARTHA    (COIT)    HUBBARD. 

|2  DANIEL — born  in  New  London,  Ct.,  June  13,  1736,  lived  in  Boston, 
London,  Eng.,  also  South  America,  and  died  in  1796  at  St.  Croix,  West 
Indies,  where  he  had  vast  mercantile  interests.  He  graduated  in  1775 
at  39  years  of  age  from  Harvard  College,  and  was  a  loyalist  during  the 
Revolutionary  War.  After  the  British  evacuation  of  Boston  in  1776  the 
Council  authorized  a  committee  to  ascertain  the  names  of  those  persons 
"  that  have  since  the  19th  of  April,  1775,  endeavored  to  counteract  the 
struggles  of  the  State  and  United  States  for  the  preservation  of  their 
liberties  and  privileges."  In  the  list  of  29  persons  submitted  by  the 
committee  appears  the  name  of  "  Daniel  Hubbard."  He  married  July 
13,  1757,  Mary  Greene,  b  May  1,  1734,  daughter  of  Thomas  and  Eliza- 
beth (Gardiner)  Greene  of  Boston.  Children — Martha  (b  June  13, 
1758,  m  Adam  Babcock),  Elizabeth  (b  Mch  17,  1760,  d  1797,  m  Nov  25, 
1786,  Gardiner  Greene,  of  Boston,  b  Sep  23,  1753,  d  1832,  and  hadf  Alary 
Anne  Greene,  who  m  Samuel  Hubbard,  LL.D.  (see  Prominent  American 
Hubbards),  Daniel  (b  Jan  27,  1762,  d  in  Boston  Sep,  1781),  Thomas 
Greene  (b  Feb  13,  1764),  John  (b  Dec  4,  1765,  d  in  1836,  lived  in  Lon- 

*  See  his  letters  to  her  under  "  Miscellaneous."       t  William  P.  Greene  and  Benjamin  D.  Greene. 


REV.  WILLIAM  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  ROGERS.     I9I 

don,  Eng.,  and  in  Demerara,  British  Guiana,  where  he  owned  large 
sugar  plantations,  m  (i)  Elizabeth  Patterson,  and  m  Oct  3, 1802,  (2)  Jane 
Parkinson,  dau  William  and  Mary  (Reading)  Parkinson  of  St.  Kitts, 
South  America,  and  had  Henry,  b  1804,  d  1837;  Mary  Greene,  b  1806,  d 
1837,  m  Russel  Sturgisof  Boston,  afterwards  of  London,  Eng.;  William, 
b  1809,  d  in  Demerara  1841;  Anne  Gordon,  b  181 1,  d  in  1872,  m  James 
T.  White  of  London;  Gardiner  Greene,  b  1813,  d  1856,  m  Charlotte  Blake 
of  Boston  and  had  Frank,  b  1853,  and  John,  b  1855;  Elizabeth,  b  1815,  d 
1 84 1,  m  Rev.  John  Singleton  Copley  Greene  of  Boston;  Martha,  b  18 16, 
d  1836;  Jane,  b  1818,  d  May  14,  1890,  m  Edward  D.  Boit  of  Boston;  John 
Parkinson,  b  in  London,  Eng.,  June  1,  1820,  Yale  1848,  lived  in  Boston, 
Northampton,  Mass.,  Westerly,  R.  I.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  and  Cotuit, 
Mass.,  Episcopal  clergyman,  m  June  28,  1849,  Adelaide  Sears  McCul- 
loch,  dau  J.  W.  B.  T.  McCulloch,  and  had  Mary  Adelaide,  b  Dec  9,  1850; 
Jane,  b  Feb  28,  1852;  John  Parkinson,  b  Aug  17,  1853,  d  Apl,  1859;  Mar- 
garet, b  Oct  28,  1854,  d  Apl,  1859;  Copley  Greene,  b  May  22,  1856,  d  June, 
1859;  Addie  Morrison,  b  Nov  27,  1858,  d  Aug,  1859;  John  Parkinson,  b 
July  3,  i860,  gr  Williams  Coll  and  Jeff  Med  Coll;  Russell  Sturgis,  b  June 
26,  1863;  Annie  McCulloch,  b  Sep  26,  1866;  William,  b  Mch  19,  1868, 
d  Mch,  1868;  Lucy  Sturgis,  b  July  19,  1872;  and  Edith,  b  Aug  4,  1874; 
Harriet,  b  1822;  and  George,  b  1823,  d  1855,  m  Elizabeth  Hadden), 
Lucretia  (b  Sep  18,  1767),  |4  Henry  (see  elsewhere),  Gilbert  Harri- 
son (b  Aug  2,  1 77 1,  Harvard  1790,  d  1803  out  West),  Charles  (b  Nov 
16,  1773,  d  y),  Mary  Timmins  (b  Mch  26,  1776),  and  Charles  Townsend 
(b  Oct  23,  1779). 

|3  WILLIAM — b  in  New  London,  Ct,  Feb  25, 1739-40,  d  in  New  York 
City  Apl  3,  1801,  lived  in  Boston,  Mass.,  Norwich  and  Colchester,  Ct. 
He  m  Aug  28,  1764  (1)  Lydia  Coit,  b  June  18,  1741,  d  Nov  2,  1778,  dau 
of  Joseph  and  Lydia  (Lathrop)  Coit  of  New  London.  Children — Lydia 
(b  in  Boston  July  5,  1765,  d  Dec  26,  1790,  m  Thomas  Lathrop),  William 
(b  Dec  10,  1767,  d  in  Norwich,  Ct.,  Sep  10,  1789),  Joseph  (b  Oct  3,  1769,  d 
May  25,  1790),  Lucretia  (b  Jan  28,  1771,  d  Oct  14,  1775),  and  David 
Green  (b  Jan  13,  1773,  d  Dec  29,  1825,  m  Oct  26,  1799,  by  Rev.  H.  O. 
Channing  to  Lucy  Man  waring,  b  Dec  19,  1778,  d  Dec  30,  1868,  of  New- 
York  City,  dau  David  and  Martha  (Saltonstall)  Manwaring,  and  had 
Lydia  Coit,  b  Oct  10,  1800,  d  Jan  6, 1801 ;  William  Joseph,  b  July  3,  1802, 
d  Oct  14,  1864,  of  Boston,  Yale  1823,  m  in  1828  (1)  Eliza  Oliver  Chaplin, 
and  had  Harriet  Ann,  b  Nov  27,  1828;  Eliza,  b  Mch  30,  1830,  d  at  9 
months;  and  David  Greene,  b  July  26,  1831,  Yale  1852;  he  m  in  1834  (2) 
Deborah  Gage  Payson,  and  had  Eliza  Chaplin,  b  Aug  6,  1835,  m  1867 
Johannes  Shumacher;  Ellen  Payson,  b  Jan  17,  1837;  Lucy,  b  Aug  29, 
1840;  Mary  Louisa,  b  Oct  10,  1842;  Emily  Lathrop,  b  Nov  28,  1844,111 


I92  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

1SS4  Austin  vSturtevant  Hawley;  and  Alice  Winthrop,  b  Sep  7,  1851; 
David  Manwanng,  b  July  28,  1804,  d  Aug  16,  1814;  Elizabeth,  b  Oct  17, 
1S06,  d  Apl  15,  1878;  Martha  Saltonstall,  b  Mch  23,  1808,  d  Jan  24,  1864; 
Harriet  Ann,  b  Mch  9,  1810,  d  Jan  3,  1826;  Charles  Dudley,  b  Dec  13, 
181 1,  d  Mch  15,  1882,  m  Maria  Sully;  Samuel,  b  Jan  22,  1S14,  d  Jan  25, 
1831;  Luey,  b  Mch  23,  1816,  d  Mch  13,  1853,  m  Thomas  Fanning;  Daniel, 
b  Oct  9,  1817,  m  Mary  Susan  Kausler,  b  June  23,  i82i,d  June  22,  1893, 
of  New  Orleans,  and  had  Martha,  b  July  2,  1858,  d  Aug  1,  1859;  George 
Kausler,  b  Mch  30,  1854,  d  y;  Charles  Dudley,  b  July  31,  1856,  m  Mary 
Josephine  Allen  (issue  Ethel,  Mary,  Daniel,  Charles  Dudley,  and  Joseph 
Kausler);  and  Eugenie,  b  Dec  13,  1861;  and  Lydia  Coit,  b  Mch  6,  1819, 
d  Jan  13,  1894.  WILLIAM  HUBBARD  then  m  at  Boston,  Mass.,  May 
J3>  1779,  (2)  Joanna  Perkins,  b  in  Boston  Dec  10,  1745,  d  there  Oct  11, 
1789,  dau  James  and  Joanna  (Mascerine)  Perkins.  Children — James  (b 
in  Boston,  Mass.,  Feb  18,  1780,  d  Oct  11,  1789),  Daniel  (b  in  Norwich, 

Ct,  Sep  4,  178 1,  d  in  Colchester,  Ct,  Oct  6,  181 1,  m and  had  Daniel 

and  Joseph),  Elizabeth  Perkins  (b  in  Norwich  Sep  2,  1783,  d  in  Boston 
in  1796),  and  Samuel  (see  Prominent  American  Hubbards,  also,  same 
heading,  Hon.  Gardiner  Greene  Hubbard).  WILLIAM  HUBBARD 
then  m  (3)  Mrs.  Alice  Deming;  no  children. 

SON    OF    DANIEL    AND    MARY    (GREENE)    HUBBARD. 

|4  HENRY— b  Oct  26,  1769,  d  Aug,  1884,  lived  in  Boston,  Mass.,  where 
he  was  a  prominent  ship  merchant  and  greatly  esteemed.  He  m  Mary 
Chadwell  of  Boston.  Children — Henry  Babcock  (b  Feb,  181 1,  d  July  6} 
1870,  physician  at  Taunton,  Mass.,  m  in  1838  Caroline  Thacher  and  had 
Charles  Thaehcr,  b  July  17,  1840,  who  m  in  1868  Isabel  Reed  of  Taunton, 
and  had  only  child,  Henry,  b  Aug  22,  1875;  and  Jane  b  1842,  who  m 
Charles  Stevenson),  Elizabeth  Greene  (b  Oct  4,  181 2,  d  May,  1851,  m 
Edward  Livermore,  and  had  infant,  d  y),  Mary  Greene  (b  Feb  21, 1814, 
m  William  Scollay  Whitwell,  and  had  William  Seal  lay,  b  Apl,  1846;  Mary 
Hubbard,  b  May,  1848;  and  Elizabeth,  bApl  29,  1S5 1),  Charles  (b  about 
1816,  d  y),  |5  Charles  Townsend  (see  elsewhere),  Gilbert  (b  July  10, 
1819,  d  May  6,  1881,  m  Helen  Matchett  of  Chicago  and  had  Henry, 
Catherine,  and  Gilbert),  and  Thomas  Greene  (b  abt  1820,  d  y). 

SON    OF    HENRY    AND    MARY    (CHADWELL)    HUBBARD. 

|5  CHARLES  TOWNSEND— b  July  8,  1817,  d  Jan  18,  1887,  lived  in 
Boston.  He  m  Sep  9,  1845,  (0  Louisa  Bowman  Sewall,  b  Dec  11,  182 1, 
d  Oct  2,  1853.  Children — Louisa  Sewall  (b  July  13,  1846,  m  John  Cot- 
ton Jackson  and  had  Louisa  Sewall,  b  July  18,  1869;  Rossitcr  Cotton,  b 
Jan  31,  1873;  and  Henry  Hubbard,  b  June  17,  1877),  Elizabeth  Liver- 


193 


I94  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

more  (b  Aug  18,  1849,  m  June  24,  1873,  Francis  Blake,  and  had  Agnes, 
b  Jan  2,  1876;  and  Benjamin  Sewall,  b  Feb  14,  1877),  Mary  (b  Jan  13, 
1848,  d  Aug  16,  1849),  and  Charlotte  Wright  (b  Jan  20,  185 1,  m  Ben- 
jamin Boring  Young  and  had  Margaret,  b  June  6,  1876;  Charlotte,^  Oct 
14,  1878;  and  Benjamin  Boring,  b  Nov  7,  1885).  CHARBES  TOWNS- 
END  HUBBARD  then  m  Mch  27,  1S55,  (2)  Elizabeth  Blair  Wells,  b 
Nov  25,  1822,  d  Dec  28,  1S90,  of  Hartford,  Ct.  Children— Charles  Wells 
(b  Feb  24,  1856,  Harvard,  A.  B.,  1878,  Treasurer  of  Ludlow  Manufactur- 
ing Co.,  133  Essex  vSt,  Boston;  he  m  June  3,  1889,  Anne  Laurens  Swann, 
b  Feb  5,  1867,  dau  Thomas  Laurens  and  Elizabeth  B.  (Lyon)  Swann  of 
Boston,  and  had  Charles  Wells,  b  Aug  18,  1890;  and  Elizabeth  Blair, 
b  Mch  16, 1894),  and  Anne  (b  Oct  3,  1858,  m  Bancroft  Chandler-Davis  and 
had  J  fa  del  and  Martha). 


tgfas: 


I  find  thou  art  no  less  than  fame  hath  bruited  thee—  William  Shakespeare. 


DOUGLAS  HUBBARD,  second  son  of  Henry  and  Sophia  (Whitney) 
Hubbard,  was  born  in  Pittsfield,  Mass.,  June  21,  181 7,  and  died  in 
New  York  City  Sep  18,  1885.  He  married  March  2,  1837,  widow  Lo- 
retta  Watson  of  Washington,  D.  C.  (d  Sep  12,  1877)  whose  children 
changed  their  name  from  "Watson"  to  "Hubbard."  DOUGLAS 
HUBBARD  was  a  scholarly  gentleman,  and  was  the  Consulate  Clerk 
at  Hobart*  Town,  and  Melbourne,  Australia,  from  1850  to  i860,  when  he 
returned  to  the  United  States  and  was  appointed  by  Secretary  Chase  to 
a  si, 600  clerkship  in  the  Second  Comptroller's  Office,  Treasury  Depart- 
ment, Washington,  D.  C.  This  position  he  filled  from  1861  to  1878, 
when  he  removed  to  Saint  Johnland,  Long  Island,  where  he  gave  his 
entire  time  to  studying  the  science  of  genealogy  and  making  numerous 
family  "trees"  for  various  Hubbard  descendants.  He  was  a  rapid 
and  tireless  worker  in  the  cause,  the  mainspring  of  his  efforts  being  un- 
bounded enthusiasm  and  a  natural  aptitude  for  statistics.  His  work 
was  confined  chiefly  to  the  descendants  of  George  Hubbard  of  Wethers- 
field,  Milford,  and  Guilford,  Ct.,  though  he  traced  out  some  of  the  branches 
of  the  William  Hubbard,  Ipswich,  Mass.,  branch,  whom  he  regarded  as  a 
tble  brother  to  this  George  Hubbard.  Nothing  has  arisen  since  his 
time  to  prove  or  disprove  this  theory.  In  his  genealogies  he  recorded 
George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.,  as  the  son  of  George  Hubbard  of 
Wethersfield,  Milford  and  Guilford,  Ct.  During  his  last  years  he  lived 
in  New  York  City  and  left  a  valuable  collection  of  genealogical  data, 
much  of  which,  unfortunately,  fell  into  unappreciative  Hubbard  hands. 
A  part  of  this  collection  was  a  monster  "  Hubbard  Tree  "  fully  thirty- 
two  feet  long,  and  about  two  feet  wide.     This  is  a  marvellous  specimen 


A  ci irruption  of  "Hubbard. 


x95 


Fac  Simile  of  One  of  Douglas  Hubbard's  "Trees.  ' 


196 


HUBBARD   GENEALOGISTS.  19~ 

of  patience  and  research.  His  daughter,  Agnes,  however,  has  nearly  as 
large  a  "  tree  "  or  roll,  which,  though  received  very  late,  lias  been  made 
some  use  of  by  the  compiler.  It  is  twenty-eight  feet  long  by  sixteen 
inches  wide.  Children — Marcellus  (b  1862,  d  y),  Sophia  (b  1863), 
Agnes  (b  1S65),  Isabel  (b  1867),  Elfreda  (b  1868),  and  Mantel  (b 
1S70,  d  y). 

EDWIN  HUBBARD,  eldest  child  of  Harvey  and  Jennie  Doane 
(Galpin)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Berlin,  Ct.,  July  29,  181 1,  and  died  in 
Bennington,  Vt.,  April  13,  1891.  He  married  in  Berlin  Oct  14,  [832, 
Hannah  Root  Xorth  (b  Oct  14,  181 6),  dan  of  Lemuel  and  Rebecca 
(Goodrich)  Xorth,  and  had  ten  children,  four  of  whom,  surviving 
childhood  only,  died  before  he  did.  EDWIN  HUBBARD  was  a  born 
genealogist,  and  collected  data  from  boyhood  to  old  age  about  his  own 
and  numerous  other  families,  comprising  Bradford,  Goodrich,  Heald, 
Drury,  Towne,  Powers,  and  others.  His  inventions  of  Ancestral  Reg- 
isters or  printed  tabular  forms  were  most  excellent  models  for  copying 
data  into. 

In  early  life  he  was  in  the  carriage  business,  but  abandoned  that  in 
1838  to  remove  "  away  out  west  "  to  Millersport,  Ohio,  where  in  a  log 
cabin  he  kept  store  for  awhile.  In  1S43  he  returned  East  to  Meriden, 
Ct.,  and  engaged  in  the  insurance  business.  He  started  in  1854  a  bank- 
ing business  at  Cape  May,  N.  J.,  but  returned  to  Meriden  and  opened  a 
news  office,  which  he  maintained  until  1S59,  when  he  left  for  Chicago, 
and  lived  at  Oak  Park,  a  suburban  villa,  for  many  years.  Here  he  did 
a  ^reat  deal  of  genealogical  labor,  being  remarkably  conscientious  and 
painstaking  in  preparing  his  data.  The  couple  were  now  childless,  and 
accepted  the  invitation  of  their  grandson,  Charles  Hoadley,  to  pass  their 
remaining  days  at  his  home  in  Bennington,  Vt.  His  widow  died  May 
4.  [894,  at  Clinton,  Ct.  Children — Walter  Norkis  (b  June  10,  1S34,  d 
Feb  19,  [879,  m  July  10,  1871,  Jessie  A.  Wallace  (b  July  8,  1849,  d  Dec 
30,  1SS8),  Amelia  Orpha  (b  Sep  8,  1836,  d  Oct  2,  1861,  m  Apl  10,  1855, 
Horace  Philemon  Hoadley  of  New  Haven  Ct.,  and  had  Charles  and 
George),  Rebecca  Curtis  (b  Nov  18,  1839,  d  in  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  July  4, 
1874,  m  Aug  13,  1857,  William  Frank  Wilder,  who  lived  in  Sublette,  111., 
andin  1870m  Brooklyn,  N.  V.,  and  had  children  Walter  L.y  editor  Colorado 
Springs  Gazette,  Frank  C  urtis,  electrical  engineer,  and  Fannie  A .  II rilder} 
who  m  Dec  2,  1882,  John  Fenner  Brown  and  lives  in  Fitchburg,  Mass. 
This  granddaughter  was  a  most  valuable  assistant  to  Mr.  HUBBARD 
in  his  genealogical  labors),  Edwin  Lemuel  (b  Mch  2,  1S42,  d  Julys, 
1862,  in  the  army,  of  camp  fever,  at  La  Grange,  Tenn),  Julia  H.  (b  Mch 
19,  1845,  d  Dec  18,  1845),  Julia  F.  (1>  Nov  8,  1846,  djan  9,  1848),  George 
F.  (b  Jan  14,  [849,  d  Feb  5,  1852),  Jenny  (b  Sep  20,  185 1,  d  Sep  21,  1S52), 
Cm  *.rles  E.  G.  (1)  Oct  24,  1S52,  d  Oct  2,  1854),  and  Emma  F.  (b  July  15, 
1S55,  d  July  21,  1S55). 


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9RQE  Hubbard 

of  GUILFORD,  Connecticut. 


Children's  children  are  the  crown  of  old  men  ;  and  the  glory  of  children  is  their  fathers. — 

Proverbs,  17 : 


A  not  inconsiderable  portion  of  the  following  data  of  GEORGE  HUBBARD,  his  wife,  and  their 
descendants  has  been  copied  from  a  huge  manuscript  volume  filed  in  the  town  clerk's  office  at  Guil- 
ford. The  original  of  this  volume  was  compiled  from  town  records  by  Dr.  Alvan  Talcott,  A.  M.,  dur- 
ing a  residence  of  50  years  in  Guilford,  who  bequeathed  it  to  the  New  Haven  Colony  Historical  Society. 
It  embraces  178  family  pedigrees  of  the  early  inhabitants  of  Guilford  and  is  fairly  correct.  The  com- 
piler does  not  indorse  all  data  found  therein,  however.  In  the  list  of  GEORGE  HUBBARD'S  children 
is  mentioned  a  son  "George  Hubbard,  born  1633,  removed  to  Greenwich."  No  son  George  is  men- 
tioned in  his  will.  He  must  either  have  died  before  his  father,  or  else  the  date  of  his  birth  is  incor- 
rect, also  the  statement  that  he  removed  to  Greenwich,  if  we  attempt  to  reconcile  the  identity  of  this 
George  with  the  George  Hubbard  who  settled  in  Middletown  and  died  there  March  18,  1684-5.  Thebe- 
fore-mentioned  volume  gives  the  birth  of  GEORGE  HUBBARD  of  Guilford  as  1594.  If  George  Hub- 
bard of  Middletown  was  born  in  1601,  according  to  his  will,  it  is  hard  to  become  reconciled  to  the 
theory  that  he  was  the  son  of  GEORGE  HUBBARD  of  Guilford,  though  he  might  have  been  a  cousin. 
Old  England  records  could  alone  unweave  this  tangle.  The  compiler  does  not  believe  American 
records  can  do  it. 

GEORGE  HUBBARD  was  born  in  England,  and  probably  somewhere 
in  the  southeastern  section,  that  part  being  numerously  populated 
by  Hubbards.  There  remains  nothing  but  conjecture  to  determine  the 
exact  locality,  the  towns  enumerated  by  various  chronologers  being  so 
plentiful  as  to  shatter  all  faith.  It  has  been  written  that  he  was  born 
near  Boston,  Lincolnshire;  in  Ockley  and  Guildford,  Surrey;  Wethers- 
field,  Essex;  Wakefield,  Yorkshire;  in  the  shire  of  Devon  and  in  the 
county  of  Kent.  A  slight  preference  perhaps  might  be  given  to  Essex 
or  Surrey. 

Tradition  says  that  he  came  first  to  Watertown,*  Mass,  about  1633. 
Traces  there  of  him,  however,  are  faint,  which  is  not  singular,  as  his 
stay  there  was  short.  His  wife  was  Mary  Bishop,  who  died  in  Guilford, 
Ct,  September  14,  1675.  She  was  the  daughter  of  John  and  Anne 
Bishop,  who  first  stopped  in  Wethersfield  and  then  in  1639  removed  to 
Guilford,  Ct.,  where  John  Bishop  was  one  of  the  seven  pillars  or  pro- 


*  For  interesting  account  of  Ancient  Watertown  (Norumbega)  see  under  Miscellaneous. 
199 


200  HUBBARD   HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

prietors  of  the  town,  and  where  he  died  in  February,  i66r,  leaving  John 
who  married  Susannah  Goldham,  Stephen  who  married  Tabitha  Wil- 
kinson, Betsey  who  married  James  Steel,  Esq.,  and  Mary  who  married 
GEORGE  HUBBARD. 

May  6,  1635,  permission  from  the  General  Court  of  Massachusetts  Bay 
was  granted  "  to  the  inhabitants  of  Watertown  to  remove  themselves  to 
any  place  they  shall  think  meete  to  make  choice  of,  provided  they  con- 
tinue still  under  this  government.  *  *  *  The  occasion  of  their  de- 
sire to  remove  was,  for  that  all  towns  in  the  Bay  began  to  be  much 
straitened  by  their  own  nearness  to  one  another,  and  their  cattle  being 
so  much  increased.  *  *  *  In  the  summer  of  1635  a  few  explorers* 
from  Watertown  established  themselves  where  Wethersfield  at  length 
grew  up.  *  *  *  October  15,  1635,  about  sixty  men,  women  and  little 
children  went  by  land  towards  Connecticut  with  their  cows,  horses  and 
swine,  and,  after  a  tedious  and  difficult  journey,  arrived  safe  there." 
With  these  migrators  went  GEORGE  HUBBARD,  his  family,  his 
father-in-law,  John  Bishop,  and  his  family;  also  another  George  Hub- 
bard, a  Thomas  Hubbard,  and  a  William  Hubbard — relationships  un- 
known, if  any  existed. 

The  winter  of  1635-36  was  a  bitterly  cold  one.  Snow  and  ice  sur- 
rounded their  poorly-constructed  habitations,  and  their  furniture  and 
provisions,  sent  by  ships,  did  not  arrive,  being  frozen  up  in  the  Con- 
necticut River;  so  that  they  had  to  subsist  that  winter  upon  "  acorns, 
malt  and  grain." 

In  1636  GEORGE  HUBBARD  and  Samuel  Wakeman  were  author- 
ized by  the  General  Court  of  Connecticut,  assisted  by  "  Ancient " 
(Thomas)  Stoughton,  "to  consider  the  bounds  and  survey  the  breadth 
of  Dorchester  (Windsor)  towards  the  Falls,  and  of  Watertown  (Wethers- 
field) towards  the  mouth  of  the  River."  The  bands  of  migrators  from 
the  vicinity  of  Boston  settled  Springfield,  Mass.,  Windsor,  Wethersfield, 
and  Hartford,  Ct. 

Though  entirely  outside  the  jurisdiction  of  the  Massachusetts  Bay 
Colony,  according  to  their  English  charter,  Massachusetts  still  kept 
Wethersfield  (called  Watertown  until  February,  1637),  under  her  pro- 
tecting aegis  and  governed  it  by  "  commissioners  "  the  first  year.  There 
was  much  friction  in  the  Wethersfield  Church.  Governor  John  Win- 
throp  wrote  that  "  the  rent  at  Connecticut  grew  greater,  notwithstanding 
the  great  pains  which  has  been  taken  for  healing  it;  so  the  church  of 

*  William  Barshum  (Bassum  or  Barsham).  John  Clarke,  Abraham  Finch  and  three  sons— Abraham, 
Daniel,  John;  (Sergt.)  John  Strickland,  Robert  Rote  and  three  sons— Robert,  John,  Daniel;  Andrew 
Ward,  William  Swayne,  Leonard  Chester,  and  probably  Nathaniel  Foote.  It  is  claimed  that  prior  to 
these  explorers  came  about  September,  1633,  John  Oldham  and  three  others  and  established  upon  this 
site  a  trading-post  to  obtain  beaver  skins  from  the  Indians. 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,    OF  GUILFORD,    CT.  2Qi 

Wethersfield  itself  was  not  only  divided  from  the  rest  of  the  town,  ete., 
but  of  those  seven  which  were  the  church  four  fell  off,  so  as  it  was 
conceived  that  thereby  the  church  was  dissolved,  which  occasioned  the 
church  of  Watertown  here  (whieh  had  clivers  of  their  members  there 
not  yet  dismissed)  to  send  two  of  their  church  to  look  after  their  mem- 
bers, and  to  take  order  with  them."  GEORGE  HUBBARD  may  have 
been  a  member  of  this  "Watertown,  Mass.,  body,  though  no  record  exists 
of  it.  He  represented  Wethersfield  at  the  first  colonial  General  Court 
under  the  constitution  of  1639,  and,  consequently,  must  have  been  made 
a  freeman  prior  to  1639,  freemen  alone  enjoying'  such  important  honors. 
Wethersfield*  originally  comprised  a  parallelogram  of  land  extending 
east  and  west  nine  miles  and  north  and  south  six  miles,  and  was  divided 
north  and  south  by  the  Connecticut  River  so  as  to  leave  three  miles  by 
six  miles  of  territory  upon  its  eastern  bank.  This  strip  of  54  square 
miles  was  bounded  on  the  north  by  what  was  afterward  the  Hartford  line, 
upon  the  south  by  what  was  afterward  the  Mattabesett  or  Middletown 
line,  on  the  east  by  the  wilderness,  and  on  the  west  by  Tunxis,  or  Farm- 
ington.  This  tract  was  purchased  from  Sowheag,  sachem  of  the  Matta- 
besetts,  Wongunks,  or  Black  Hill  Indians.  The  original  deed  is  not 
on  rile.  GEORGE  HUBBARD  was  acquainted  with  the  particulars  of 
the  transaction,  however,  and  to  confirm  and  strengthen  the  title  to  this 
purchase  the  General  Court  placed  upon  file  his  deposition,  which  he 
forwarded  from  Guilford,  at  the  Court's  request.  The  following  is  a 
literal  copy  of  the  certificate: 

Guilford,  June  16,  1065. 
Thin  is  to  certify  unto  all  whom  it  may  concern: 

That  upon  his  certaine  knowledge,  by  the  advice  of  the  Court,  Wethersfield  men  gave  so  much 
unto  Si  >wheag,  as  was  to  his  satisfart  ion,  for  all  their  plantations  lyeing  on  both  sides  the  Great  River, 
with  the  Wands,  viz  :  six  miles  in  bredth  on  both  sides  the  River.  &c.,  six  miles  deep  from  the  River 
westward,  and  three   miles   deep  from  the  River   eastward.     Thus   testifyeth  George   Hubbard. 


By  me,      TJ^i^JJjy.^iJi^- 

Taken  upon  oath  before  me,  Willm.  Leete. 

This  is  a  true  copy  of  the  originell,  being  examined  and  compared  therewith  this  18  of  May,  1667, 
pr.  me:  John  Allyn,  Secretry. 

The  eastern  portion  of  this  tract  extended  from  (now)  Hartford  line 
to  Roaring  Brook  or  Sturgeon  River,  and  was  called  Naubuc  Farms. 
It  was  the  first  instance  in  Connecticut  of  a  town  being  cut  out  from 
another  town,  for  which  permission  was  given  in  1690,  but  which  did 
not  actually  occur  until  October,  1693.  About  1653  the  eastern  colony 
practically  enjoyed  independence  however,  being  exempted  from 
"training"  with  the  western  colony.     This  eastern  portion  of  Wethers- 

*  From  aether,  ram,  and  fetd,  field,  and  was  probably  named  after  Wethersfield,  on  the  Black- 
water  River,  in  Hinckford  Hundred,  Esse*  County,  Eng.,  a  celebrated  English  sheep-raising  town  in 
its  day. 


202 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


field,  or  Naubuc  Farms,  was  named  Glastonbury,  which  subsequently 
became  North  and  South  Glastonbury,  and  in  1639  was  surveyed  by 
GEORGE  HUBBARD,  a  "prominent  surveyor,"  by  order  of  the  Gen- 
eral Court,  and  apportioned  to  the  original  settlers.  The  apportion- 
ments or  lots  extended  from  the  river  east  three  miles,  and  were  very 
narrow,  that  all  might  have  water  on  the  west,  fertile  meadows  in  the 
centre,  and  wood  and  pasture  land  on  the  east.  They  were  called  the 
"  three-mile  lots"  and  were  numbered  up  to  44,  GEORGE  HUBBARD'S 
being  No.  14,  in  North  Glastonbury.  It  was  32^  rods  wide,  contained 
195  acres,  and  laid  between  Thomas  Uffoot's  [Ufford]  on  the  north  and 
George  Wyllys'  (Gov.  Conn.  1642)  on  the  South.  Afterward  George 
Wyllys'  tract  of  30  rods  wide  by  3  rods  broad,  containing  185  acres, 
was  purchased  by  GEORGE  HUBBARD'S  descendants  and  some  of 
the  tract  remained  in  the  family  until  1850  or  later.  In  1672  this  eastern 
section  of  Wethersfield  was  enlarged  by  an  addition  of  30  square  miles 
upon  its  eastern  boundaries,  called  (some  of  it)  Eastbury,  and  gave 
Glastonbury*  considerable  dimension. 

The  west  side  of  the  river,  Wethersfield  proper,  has  lost  some  of  its 
territory,  Stepney  Parish  or  Rocky  Hill  being  taken  out,  also  Newington, 
and  a  part  to  form  Berlin.  The  river  also  has  encroached  by  a  change 
of  channel  at  the  expense  of  Wethersfield  and  to  the  advantage  of  Glas- 
tonbury, which  gained  thereby  Manhannock  Island,  comprising  about 
200  acres,  and  mentioned  in  GEORGE  HUBBARD'S  deposition.  On 
this  island  lived  Thomas  Wright  and  his  descendants.  There  being 
(apparently)  no  burials  of  Hubbards  in  the  cemetery  at  Wethersfield 
proper,  it  is  a  fair  inference  that  none  occupied  the  western  portion.  In 
this  cemetery  is  the  oldest  slab  the  writer  has  found  in  New  England. 
It  is  quite  well  preserved,  and  at  its  head  has  a  very  crude  coat-of-arms 
scratched  unskilfully  upon  it,  representing,  perhaps,  two  winged  horses 
(Pegasus),  with  ermine  or  squirrel-tail  "charges"  scattered  about  the 
escutcheon.  It  reads:  "  Here  lyes  the  body  of  Leonard  Chester,  armiger, 
[armorer,  or  esquire]  late  of  the  towne  of  Blaby,  and  severall  other 
Lordships  in  Leicestershire,  Deceased  in  Wethersfield  Anno  Domini 
1648.  Etatis  39."  Mount  Lamentation  was  named  thus  because  this 
man  was  once  lost  there  in  the  dense  woods  and  nearly  perished  before 
being  found  by  the  inhabitants  who  beat  drums,  fired  guns,  and  made 
outcries  and  lamentations  to  attract  his  attention. 

As  a  stimulus  to  punctuality  and  early  rising  the  Connecticut  Colonial 


*  Alonzo  Bowen  Chapin,  D.  D.,  editor,  historian,  lawyer,  and  pastor  of  St.  Luke's  Church,  Glaston- 
bury, in  1850  and  several  years  thereafter  says  that  "an  apostolic  splendor  irradiates  Glastonbury  " 
(Fulgor  Apostolicus  Glastoniam  irradiat).  The  wide  thoroughfare,  lined  with  elms,  the  numerous  old 
houses,  quaint,  roomy,  and  substantial,  certainly  produce  upon  the  emotional  inner  senses  a  kind  of 
sophorific  delight  or  peaceful  calm. 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OE  GUILFORD,  CT. 


20; 


records  read:  "  163S-9,  April  5  *  *  *  Thurston  Rayner,  GEORGE  HUB- 
BERTE  (members  of  General  Court  from  Wethersfield)  are  fined  is  a 
peece  for  failing  att  the  hower  appointed  which  [is]  7  of  the  Clocke." 

GEORGE  HUBBARD  lived  about  three  years  in  Wethersfield,  and 
then  with  his  neighbor  Thomas  Ufford,  William  Fowler,  Rev.  Peter 
Pruden  and  others  went  southward  to  the  shore  of  Long  Island  Sound 
and  settled  in  Milford,  being  assigned  Milford  Island  as  his  grant.  He 
was  one  of  "  those  persons — whose  names  are  hereunder  written — who 
are  allowed  to  be  free  planters,  having  for  the  present,  liberty  to  act  in 
the  choyce  of  public  officers  for  the  carrying  on  of  public  affayres 
in  this  plantacion.  *  *  *  George  Hubbard:  came  from  Weth- 
ersfield." There  are  44  names  in  the  list  of  original  Milford  settlers; 
which  appears  on  the  first  page  of  Book  1  of  Milford  Records  and  bears 
the  date  of  entry  of  November  20,  1639.  These  44  planters  represented 
only  heads  of  families.  He  was  admitted  to  the  church  there  January 
15,  1644. 

Before  1650  he  sold  Milford  Island  to  Richard  Bryan  (this  island  con- 
tained 10  acres  and  was  called  Poquahaug  by  the  Indians,  and  was  their 
favorite  summer  resort)  and  removed  with  his  son-in-law,  John  Fowler, 
to  Guilford,  where  his  wife's  parents,  John  and  Anne  Bishop,  had  pre- 
ceded him,  and  September  22,  164S,  he  bought  there  the  property  of 
Jacob  Sheaffe  ("  one  of  the  seven  pillars  of  Guilford  "),  who  with  his 
family  went  to  Boston,  where  he  died  in  1659  a  prominent  merchant,  or 
leather  dealer,  a  street  in  Boston  being  named  after  him.  GEORGE 
HUBBARD  was  admitted  to  church  membership  in  Guilford  October 
6,  1650.  During  years  1652-55-57-58-60-62-65-66  he  was  a  Deputy 
Magistrate.  In  1666-67  ne  was  a  member  of  the  Assembly  at  the  union 
of  the  Hartford  and  New  Haven  Colonies.  In  May,  1670,  the  Court  in- 
vested him  with  authority  to  "  joyne  persons  in  marriage."  "He  was 
a  man  of  high  standing  and  prominent  in  the  politics  of  his  times,"  and 
died  in  Guilford  in  January,  1683.  His  will  is  on  file  in  Vol  1,  pages  96-97 
(new  numbers)  Probate  Records  Office,  New  Haven,  and  is  dated  May 
23,  1682,  with  a  codicil  dated  Dec  30,  1682;  inventory,  taken  May  30, 
l683>  is  ,£564-  08.  06.  He  was  buried  in  the  graveyard  then  located 
south  of  where  now  is  the  soldiers'  monument  in  the  centre  of  the  vil- 
lage green  (see  picture),  a  rectangular  square  patterned  after  the 
original  New  Haven  plat.  This  cemetery  was  used  up  to  181 7,  when 
two  new  ones,  East  and  West,  were  begun.  The  pond  holes  were  filled 
by  leveling  down  the  hillocks,  the  Episcopal  and  Congregational 
churches  and  the  town  hall  removed,  and  the  old  headstones  were  scat- 
tered about  the  town.  Some  were  taken  to  the  new  cemeteries  and 
tumbled  up  against  the  fence,  some  were  claimed  by  descendants,  while 


204 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 


others  were  flatly  laid  around  the  Congregational  and  Episcopal  churches 
to  catch  rain-water  from  the  eaves  and  to  make  runways  for  small  boys. 


VILLAGE     GREEN      AT      GUILFORD,     CT.        SITE      OF      OLD      CEMETERY     WHERE 

GEORGE    HUBBARD    WAS    BURIED.       (PHOTOGRAPHED    BY    PHINEAS 

HUBBARD,  CAMBRIDGE,  MASS.) 

Children — Mary,  John,  (?  George),  Sarah,  Hannah,  Elizabeth,  Abi- 
gail, William  and  Daniel. 

MARY  was  born  in  England  about  (?)  1625  (Dr.  Talcott  gives  1634), 
and  came  with  her  parents  to  Watertown,  Mass.,  Wethersfield,  Milford, 
and  Guilford,  Ct.  She  married  in  1647  John  Fowler  (son  of  William 
and  Sarah  Fowler  of  Milford  and  New  Haven),  who  first  appears  on  the 
Guilford  records  June  30,  1650.  He  was  a  marshal  there  from  1652  to 
1 66 1,  and  Deputy  Magistrate  from  1661  to  1664.  From  August  3,  1669, 
to  1673,  he  was  "  sole  deacon  of  the  church,"  and  also  Deputy  to  the 
Colonial  Court  until  his  death,  which  occurred  Sep  14,  1676.  He  lived 
on  the  corner  of  what  is  now  Broad  and  Fair  Streets,  diagonally  oppo- 
site to  his  father-in-law's  house,  which  faces  the  beginning  of  Fair 
street.  His  widow  died  April  13,  17 13.  Children— Abigail,  Mary, 
Abraham,  John,  Mehetable  and  Elizabeth. 

SARAH  was  born  in  1635  in  Wethersfield,  Ct.,  and  married  Daniel 
Harrison,  son  of  Richard,  Jr.,  who  came  to  New  Haven  in  1644.  This 
family   of    Harrisons   (Samuel,    Benjamin,    John,   Joseph,  George  and 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  GUILFORD,  CT.  205 

Daniel)  removed  to  Newark,  N.  J.  There  was  a  large  exodus  of  Con- 
necticut families  into  that  locality  about  or  prior  to  1665,  that  settled 
Newark,  Elizabethtown,  and  Bergen  Point. 

HANNAH  was  born  in  1637  in  Wethersfield,  Ct.,  and  baptized  at 
Milford,  Ct.,  May  26,  1644.  She  married  Jacob  Melyen  (spelled  in 
George  Hubbard's  will  "  Molynoe  "),  son  of  the  Patroon,  Cornelius 
Melyen,  of  New  Haven,  in  1662.  He  had  a  brother  Isaac  (possibly 
Samuel  of  Fairfield  was  his  brother  also).  They  came  from  Holland 
to  New  Amsterdam,  thence  to  Connecticut  before  1655,  when  Jacob  and 
his  father  ("Mr.")  took  the  freeman's  oath.  After  1663  Jacob  and  family 
removed  to  Boston,  where  he  was  a  leather  merchant  and  constable. 
His  will,  probated  Dec  26,  1706,  names  widow,  HANNAH,  and  children 
Samuel  (H.  U.  1696)  and  Abigail  (who  married  William  Tilley). 
HANNAH  (HUBBARD)  MELYEN  died  in  1717. 

ELIZABETH  was  born  in  1638  in  Wethersfield,  Ct.  She  married 
very  late  in  life  Deacon  John  Norton,  a  widower,  son  of  Thomas  and 
Grace  Norton,  of  Guilford,  formerly  of  Ockley,  Surrey,  Eng.  He  had 
first  married  Hannah  Stone,  dau  William  and  Hannah  Stone;  he  was 
made  freeman  in  1667,  and  died  March  5,  1704.  It  is  not  known  which 
wife  was  mother  to  his  children — John  (d  y),  John,  Samuel,  Thomas, 
Hannah,  Mary — but  probably  his  first  wife. 

ABIGAIL  was  born  in  1640  in  (probably)  Wethersfield  and  baptized 
May  26,  1644,  in  Milford,  Ct.  She  married,  October  14,  1657,  Humphrey 
Spinning  (died  Nov,  1689),  of  New  Jersey,  nephew  and  legatee  of 
Humphrey  Spinning  (Spinage  or  Spenning),  who  came  from  the  Dela- 
ware River  country  in  1639  to  New  Haven.  He  had  cousins  Mary  and 
Edward,  and  was  of  German  parentage.  She  is  supposed  to  have  died 
after  1662  and  prior  to  1682.  Children — John  (b  Feb  11,  1659,  d  Feb  27, 
1 712,  m  Mch  16,  1687,  (1)  Deborah  Bartlett,  d  Dec  14,  1692,  and  Aug  20, 
1694,  (2)  Rachel  Savage,  b  Apl  15,  1673,  dau  John  and  Elizabeth 
(D'Aubin)  Savage  of  Middletown;  she  afterward  m  (2)  Phineas  Hall  of 
Middletown),  David  (b  Feb  5,  1661),  and  Abigail  (b  abt  1662). 

For  descendants  of  John,  who  married  Mary  Merriam,  see  page  213; 
Daniel,  who  married  Elizabeth  Jordan,  see  page  255,  and  William,  who 
married  Abigail  Dudley,  see  page  264. 


im»uin.1,mHi»i»»wiwm«m»wnmmim»wm'"""»»"< jLu...... 


THE    OLD    DUTCH    HUBBARD    BIBLE. 


206 


mssmm  wms 


Antiquity  !    Thou  wondrous  charm,  what  art  thou,  that  heing  nothing,  art  everything 
thou  wert,  thou  wert  not  antiquity!— Charles  Lamb. 


Yet  when 


DR.  CHARLES  HUBBARD  of  Brooklyn,  X.  Y.,  is  the  owner  of  a 
rare  old  Dutch  Bible  that  came  from  Holland  in  early  colonial 
days.  Upon  its  fly  leaf  is  written  the  marriage  of  "  Roelef  Schenck  to 
Geertie  Hendricks  May  29,  17 14,"  with  the  names  of  their  children,  after- 
ward born,  indicating  its  early  possession  by  either  a  Schenck  or  Hen- 
dricks family.  It  then  passed  into  the  possession  of  Dr.  Jacobus  Hub- 
bard, senior,  of  Monmouth  County,  X.  J.,  who  transmitted  it  to  his  son 
Elias.  From  Elias  it  went  to  his  son  William  Henry,  who  bequeathed  it 
in  turn  to  his  only  son,  Dr.  Charles  Hubbard. 

The  act  of  authority  to  print  this  volume  was  granted  Sep  6,  1698,  by 
the  "  Bergermeesters  and  Regeerders  of  the  Stadt  of  Dordrecht"  to 
••  Pieter  Keur  en  Amsterdam,  Dordrecht,  and  Pieter  Rotterdam  in  com- 
pagnie,"  who  issued  it  in  1716  from  Amsterdam,  the  birthplace  of  the 
art  preservative  of  all  arts.  It  is  printed  in  various  sizes  of  old  German 
type  in  sometimes  one,  two,  or  four  columns,  copiously  annotated,  upon 
durable  hand-made  paper,  and  bound  in  stout  calf  (embossed)  with 
heavy  brass  clasps  to  preserve  its  shape.  The  illustrations  are  numer- 
ous, symbolical  of  the  important  sacred  events,  and  beautifully  printed 
fr<  'in  steel  plates,  included  in  which  are  maps  of  the  world  and  the  Holy 
Land.  It  includes  the  Xew  Testament,  Old  Testament,  and  certain 
Apocryphal  chapters,  and  is  in  a  fine  state  of  preservation,  inscribed 
therein  being  the  family  records  of  several  Hubbard  generations  upon 
blank  leaves  inserted  for  the  purpose.     It  makes  709  good-sized  pages. 


Another  old  Bible  in  the  possession  of  a   Hubbard  family  is  a  very 
interesting  one  now  owned  by  the  Rev.  George  Henry  Hubbard  of  Nor- 
207 


208  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

ton,  Mass.     It  came  to  him  through  his  father,  Henry  Hubbard  of  Sher- 
brooke,  P.  Q.,  who  in  turn  received  it  from  his  brother  the  late  Rev. 
Austin  Osgood  Hubbard.     It  is  a  copy  of  Theodore  Beza's  New  Testa- 
ment and  was  printed  in  the  year  1582.     Theodore  Beza,  the  great  re- 
former of  Geneva,  Switzerland,  published  in  1556  in  Latin  a  translation 
from  the  Greek;  in  1565  he  published  his  first  Greek  Testament  with 
his  Latin  and  an  old  Latin  translation  in  parallel  columns  with  copious 
foot  notes.     A  copy  of  this  edition  is  now  on  file  in  the  Congregational 
Library  in  Boston.     In   1582   a  second  edition  was  published,  making 
three  editions,  including  the  Greek,  to  which  the  one  now  referred  to 
belongs.     We  are  happy  to  be  able  to  give  a  reproduction  of  the  title 
page  which  is  in  an  excellent  state  of  preservation.    The  title  page  when 
translated  into  English  reads,  "  The  New  Testament  or  New  Covenant 
of  our  Lord  Jesus  Christ,  of  which  two  translations  are  given  to  the 
text,  the  one  old  and  the  other  the  new  one  of  Theodore  Beza,  carefully 
edited  by  him.     THEODORE  BEZA'S  NOTES,  in  which  he  has  also 
revised  in  this  third  edition  his  response  to  Sebastian  Castellio  in  which 
many   passages   of    the    New   Testament   and   in   his   own   notes  are 
thoroughly  discussed,  stands  printed  separately."     The  legend  on  the 
tree,  "  Do  not  taste  the  top,"  will  undoubtedly  bear  investigation,  and 
our  readers  are  entitled  to  whatever  conclusions  they  may  draw  from  it. 
This  book  is  remarkably  well  preserved,   considering  its  great  age, 
and  it  is  exceedingly  to  be  regretted  that  there  is  now  no  one  living 
who  has  any  information  as  to  how  it  came  into  the  Hubbard  family. 
The  book  was  evidently  rebound  in  the  early  part  of  the  19th  century, 
and  the  edges  of  the  leaves  were  trimmed  at  that  time,  so  that  several 
interesting  memoranda  which  were  written  in  the  margin  have  been 
mutilated   and   their  history  or  worth  can  not  be  exactly  determined. 
The  Testament  was  written  in  two  volumes,  and  they  are  bound  to- 
gether in  this  book.     On  page  120,  Vol.  1,  appears  a  pen  sketch  of  the 
head  of  the  family  bird,  and  on  page  526   of  the  same  volume  a  pen 
sketch  of  the  same  in  full.     On  page  279  appear  the  names,  "John," 
"Lock"  and  "  Eliott,"  without  definite  connection.     On  page  338  are 
part  of  the  names  "  Hubbard,"  "John,"   and  on   page  351   are  parts  of 
the  words,  "John,"   "Eliott,"  and  the  letters  "Cam."     This  latter  in- 
scription may  stand  for  Cambridge,  and,  if  so,  the  question  naturally 
occurs,  "  Was  this  book  at  one  time  in  the  possession  of  the  famous  In- 
dian apostle  ?"     A  collection  of  names  appears  on  page  369,  of  which 
we  give  a  reproduction.     In  Vol  2,  on  page  327  appear  the  words  "  Eli, 
Ejus,  A.D,"  and  underneath,  "John,  17-."     Upon  the  title  page  when 
held  to  the  light  appear  a  number  of  names,  some  of  which  can  not  be 
distinguished.     Among  them  is  the  name  "John  Brown,"  and  on  the 


'  I  i<  I  s  T  I   0 


OLD    HUBBARD    BIBLE. 

(Photographed  by  Thineas  Hubbard  of  Cambridge,  Mass.) 


209 


2IO  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

opposite  side  of  the  tree  on  the  outer  edge,  "  John  Eliott  to  Chester 
White"  (or  "Williams").  The  surname  cannot  be  accurately  deter- 
mined. There  are  two  well  drawn  English  letters  a  trifle  below  the 
middle  which  are  intended,  evidently,  for  initials,  "J.  L."  On  the  fly 
leaf  appears  the  inscription,  "  Austinius  O.  Hubbard,  Colegii,  Valensis, 
Novi  Portus,  A.  D.  1823."  From  what  has  been  said  it  will  appear  that 
the  book  has  been  in  the  family  at  least  since  some  time  in  the  18th 
century.  It  is  possible  that  the  signatures  on  the  margin  are  those  of 
some  former  collegiate  Hubbard.  In  itself,  aside  from  family  associa- 
tions, the  book  is  a  valuable  one,  and  it  is  especially  so  to  the  Hubbard 
family  by  reason  of  its  long  sojourn  among  them.  The  pages  of  the 
book  bear  marks  of  age,  being  yellow  and  much  stained;  but  all  the 
pages,  except  the  title  page,  are  intact,  and  like  the  members  of  the 
family  in  which  its  last  years  have  been  spent,  age  but  gives  a  dignity 
and  glory  without  disfigurement. 

Still  another  old  Bible,  more  ancient  than  either  of  the  foregoing  ones, 
is  owned  by  a  Hartford,  Ct.,  family  of  Hubbards.  Five  editions  of  this 
volume  (Protestant)  were  printed  between  1568  and  1585,  and  this  copy 
bears  the  date  of  1570.  It  is  usually  called  by  scholars  the  "Bishops' 
Bible,"  because,  under  the  supervision  of  Archbishop  Mathew  Parker,* 

*  The  American  Encyclopedia  of  Printing  relates  that  he  was  the  liberal  patron  of  fine  printing 
and  employed  an  eminent  English  printer  to  publish  his  works,  one  John  Day  (Daye,  Daie,  or  D'Aije), 
b  1522,  d  July  23,  1584.  Day  published  the  Tyndale  Bible,  Mathews  Bible,  and  some  245  other  works, 
many  of  them  being  handsomely  illustrated.  His  device  was  a  rising  sun  with  a  man  awakening  a 
slumbering  figure  in  the  foreground,  and  the  motto:  Arise,  for  it  is  Day.  This  was  intended  to  con- 
vey his  religious  devotion  to  the  cause  of  the  Reformation  as  well  as  a  pun  upon  his  name.  Being  an 
enthusiastic  adherent  of  John  Rogers  and  John  Fox  he  was  imprisoned  by  Queen  Mary.  On  the 
accession  of  Queen  Elizabeth  he  was  given  the  highest  offices  in  the  Stationers'  Company  and  espe- 
cially befriended  by  Bishop  Parker.  Under  his  patr<  mage  he  cut  the  first  Saxon  letter,  which  was  used 
by  the  Bishop  in  a  homily  published  in  1567  and  in  the  Saxon  Gospels  edited  by  Fox  in  1571.  John  Day 
was  twice  married  and  had  26  children,  13  by  each  wife.  One  of  them,  Richard  Day,  succeeded  him 
and  printed  exclusively  religious  publications.  He  afterward  abandoned  printing  and  succeeded  Fox 
as  minister  at  Reigate.  Two  other  sons  also  became  clergymen  and  authors.  Another  (supposed)  son, 
Stephen  Daye,  b  1611 ,  became  the  first  printer  in  America,  arriving  in  1638,  where  he  printed  the  Free- 
man's Oath,  Almanac  (by  William  Pierce,  mariner),  and  Bay  Psalm  Book,  translated  from  Hebrew  by 
Rev.  John  Eliot  and  Rev.  Mr.  Weld.    Stephen  Daye  died  in  Cambridge,  Mass.,  in  1668. 

John  Day  was  buried  at  Bradley-Parva,  Suffolk  County,  England.  Upon  a  curious  mural  entabla- 
ture in  the  chancel  are  inlaid  in  brass,  effigies  of  himself  and  first  wife,  kneeling  beside  a  table,  before 
which  are  two  babes  in  swaddling  clothes.  Behind  Day's  figure  are  grouped  six  sons;  behind  his  wife 
five  daughters.    The  inscription  is  as  follows,  cut  in  Old  English  letter: 

"  Here  lyes  the  Daye  that  darkness  could  not  blind, 

When  popish  fogges  had  overcaste  the  sunne. 

This  Daye  the  cruell  nighte  did  leave  behind. 

To  view,  and  shew  what  blodi  actes  were  donne. 

He  set  a  Fox  to  wright  how  martyrs  runne. 

By  death  to  lyfe.    Fox  ventured  paynes  and  health 

To  give  them  light;  Daye  spent  in  print  his  wealth. 

But  God  with  gayne  returned  his  wealth  agayne. 

And  gave  to  him  as  he  gave  to  the  poore. 

Two  wyves  he  had.  pertakers  of  his  payne. 

Each  wyfe  twelve  babies  had.  and  each  of  them  one  more; 

Als  [Alice]  was  the  last  encreaser  of  his  store. 

Who.  mourning  long  for  being  left  alone. 

Set  up  this  tombe,  herself  turned  to  a  stone." 


OLD  HUBBARD  BIBLES. 


21  I 


seven  bishops,  besides  the  Archbishop,  out  of  thirteen  translators,  trans- 
lated it  from  the  Latin.  It  is  supposed  to  have  been  brought  from  Eng- 
land in  1633-5,  or  thereabouts,  by  George  Hubbard,  of  Middletown, 
though  this  can  not  be  proven. 

When  Queen   Elizabeth  was  in 
the  twelfth  year  of  her  reign,  and 
vShakspeare  but  twelve  years  of  age, 
she  sanctioned  the  printing  of  this 
Book  to  circumvent  the  adoption  of 
the  Geneva  Bible.     Her  half  sister, 
Queen  Mary  I.,  who  preceded  her 
and  reigned  five  years,  had  been 
very  active  in  causing  to  be  de- 
stroyed all  the  Protestant  Latin  edi- 
tions.    When  Elizabeth  succeeded 
her  in  1558  she  heartily  encouraged 
the  preparation  of  this  Protestant 
version.     In  fact,  her  interest  led 
her  vanity  into  having  the   title- 
page  adorned  with  an  illustration 
of  herself  being  transported  into 
heaven  upon  the  shoulders  of  an- 
gels.    This  frontispiece  has  disap- 
peared from   the   Book  by  time's 
ravages,  but    other   illustrations 
abound  therein.     The  coat-of-arms 
of  different  dignitaries  appear  at 
the    beginnings   of  various   chapters.     Archbishop  Parker,  of  Canter- 
bury, placed  his  seal  at  the  opening  of  Genesis  with  the  inscription, 
Mundus    Transit   et   Concupiscentia   Ejus,  and  his  sovereign's  initials 
underneath,  "  E.  R.,"  meaning  Elizabeth  Rcgina.     The  next  illustration 
is  that  of  William  Cecil,  or  Lord  Burleigh,  a  layman  translator,  who 
caused  his  "  coat "  to  be  inserted  at  the  beginning  of  the  chapter  of 
Isaiah.     Around  the  "  coat  "  is  the  buckled  garter  with  the  well-known 
inscription,  Honi  Soit  qui  vial  y  poise,  showing  him  to  have  been  a 
member  of  the  most  noble  Order  of  the  Garter,  the  highest  honor  ever 
conferred  in  knighthood,  which  was  instituted  by  King  Edward  III.  in 
1350.     Following  his  crest  comes  that  of  the  Earl  of  Leicester,  a  great 
favorite  of  Elizabeth's,  whose  crest  decorates  the  beginning  of  Joshua, 
and  which  also  shows  upon  it  the  symbols  of  the  Order  of  the  Garter 
with  the  additional  motto  underneath  of  Droit  et  Loyal.    Probably  these 
nobles  translated  these  various  Books.     The  King  James  Bible  was  pat- 


212  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

terned  after  this  largely,  though  the  translations  in  the  "  Bishops'  Bible  " 
are  far  more  unique  and  startling.  As  a  substitute  for  the  headline 
"  Song  of  Songs,"  or  Canticum  Canticorum,  over  the  Book  of  Solomon, 
there  appears  in  astonishing  and  bold  letters  "The  Ballet  of  Ballets." 
In  Jeremiah,  Chapter  VIII,  verse  20,  is  found  the  words:  "Is  there  no 
triacle  [treacle]  at  Gilead?  Is  there  no  phisition  there?  Why  then  is 
not  the  health  of  my  people  recovered  ?"  In  the  Douay  Bible,  published 
shortly  afterward,  "rosin  "is  used  instead  of  "  triacle,"  which  is  now 
read  as  "balm."  In  Ecclesiastes  the  admonition  to  "  Cast  thy  Bread 
upon  the  Waters  "  is  rendered  in  this  Book  in  the  almost  unintelligible 
language  of  "  Lay  thy  bread  upon  wet  faces,  and  so  shalt  thou  find  it 
after  many  days."  It  is  replete  with  many  other  equally  interesting 
phraseological  expressions. 

This  old  Book  is  now  325  years  of  age,  and  very  much  thumb-worn, 
indicating  that  our  ancestors  were  in  frequent  moods  of  piety.  Some  of 
the  leaves  are  missing,  and  it  has  lately  been  rebound.  Upon  one  of 
the  blank  spaces  in  it  is  written  in  scrawling  penmanship  these  words: 
"  Georg  Hubbard's  Book,  who  lived  about  the  year  1720:  Left  this  Bibel 
to  Caleb  Hubbord  &  Died  about  A,  1785,  and  left  it  to  Mary  Hubbar, 
wife  of  Capt.  Amos  Try  on,"  etc. 

This  George  was  probably  of  the  third  generation.  Though  the  lineal 
transmission  of  this  ancient  heirloom  through  the  early  families  can  not 
be  exactly  determined,  tradition  indicates  that  it  descended  from  George 
Hubbard  (who  m  Elizabeth  Watts)  to  his  eldest  son,  Joseph  Hubbard 
(who  m  Mary  Porter),  thence  to  their  third  son,  George  Hubbard  (who 
m  Mehitable  Miller),  thence  to  Caleb  Hubbard  (who  m  Elizabeth  Mil- 
ler), and  thence  to  their  daughter  Mary  Hubbard  (who  m  Capt.  Amos 
Tryon);  and  from  the  Tryon  family  it  came  back  into  the  possession  of 
Hon.  Charles  C.  Hubbard  (ex-Comptroller  of  Conn.)  of  Hartford,  Ct. 

The  compiler  was  unable  to  obtain  the  privilege  of  having  this  valua- 
ble heirloom  photographed. 


^DESCENDANTS  OF  ■:• 


Those  who  do  not  look  upon  themselves  as  a  link  connecting  the  past  with  the  future  do  not  per- 
form their  duty  to  the  world— Darnel  WebsU  r. 


JOHN  HUBBARD,*  eldest  son  of  George  and  Mary  (Bishop)  Hub- 
bard, was  born  in  England  about  1630  and  came  an  infant  with  his 
parents  to  America  about  1633.  It  is  claimed  by  some  of  his  descend- 
ants that  he  lived  a  few  years  in  Concord,  Mass.,  with  the  Merriams, 
relatives  of  his  wife,  Mary  Merriam.  If  so,  he  removed  afterward  to 
Wethersfield,  for  his  first  four  children  were  born  there.  The  Con- 
necticut colonial  records  show  that  "  at  a  meeting  at  Goodman  Ward's 
house  April  18,  1659,  the  Company  there  met  engaged  themselves  under 
their  own  hands  to  or  by  their  deputies  to  move  out  of  the  colony  into 
the  jurisdiction  of  Massachusetts."  Some  thirty  persons  signed  this 
agreement,  but  not  all  of  them  kept  it.  A  settlement  was  accordingly 
begun  at  "  Norwottuck  "  (Hadley)  with  Rev.  John  Russell,  Jr.,f  as  the 
spiritual  leader  and  governing  power  of  the  band.  With  them  went 
JOHN  HUBBARD  and  his  family  of  four  children   and  wife   MaryJ 

*  The  compiler  begins  and  continues  this  article  to  the  end  on  the  assumption  that  John  Hubbard 
who  married  Mary  Merriam  of  Concord,  Mass.,  was  the  s<m  of  George  Hubbard  and  Mary  Bishop  of 
1  Juilford,  Ct.,  though  lie  is  not  convinced  of  it.  Undeniably  George  Hubbard  had  a  son  John,  yet  the 
writer  can  not  prove  that  this  one  was  his  son.  Genealogists  (deceased)  Edwin  Hubbard,  Douglas 
Hubbard,  and  Dr.  Alvan  Talcott  of  Guilford,  Ct.,  so  declared  it  (giving  birth  about  1(130).  as  also  did 
numerous  family  traditions,  while  Bond's  Genealogies  and  History  of  Watertown,  Mass.,  inferred  it, 
viz  :  "  supposed  to  lie  the  eldest  son  of  George  and  Mary." 

t  He  came  from  Cambridge.  Mass.,  to  Wethersfield  about  1650.  succeeding  there  Rev.  Henry 
Smith.  The  principal  reasons  appearing  to  actuate  his  removal  were  a  censure  received  from  the 
General  Court  for  "carelessness"  growing  out  of  charges  preferred  against  him  by  Lieut.  John  Hol- 
lister,  whom  he  had  "excommunicated  "  from  his  church.  His  dignity  became  offended,  and,  with 
his  sympathizers,  he  went  to  Hadley.  JOHN  HUBBARD'S  name  is  in  the  list  of  those  who  went  with 
him,  so  he  must  have  been  a  "sympathizer."    A  few  persons  from  Hartford  also  joined  them. 

t  It  is  difficult  to  identify  the  parents  of  this  "Mary,"  unless  he  married  the  sister  of  Robert  Mer- 
riam, the  universal  belief.  According  to  English  parish  records,  however,  Robert  had  no  sister 
"  Mary."  William  and  Sara  Meriam  of  Hadlowe,  Kent,  Eng.,had  children  Joseph,  George,  and  Robert 
'who  came  to  Concord,  Mass. i,  Susan,  Margaret,  Joane  and  Sara.  They  may  have  had  a  daughter 
Mary  whose  record  of  birth  h  is  evaded  investigators.  Joseph  (eldest)  had  wife  Sarah  (?  Stone,  dau 
213 


21  a  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GEXEALOGY. 

(Merriam)  Hubbard,  formerly  of  Concord,  Mass.,  whom  he  must  have 
married  about  1648-9  at  an  early  age.  He  was  made  freeman  Mch  26, 
1 66 1,  and  had  five  children  born  in  Hadley.  After  1672  he  went  to 
Hatfield,  and  died  there  at  the  home  of  his  son  Isaac  in  1702.  His  will, 
probated  in  August,  1702,  showed  seven  children  then  living,  Mary  and 
Hannah  having  died.  Children — Mary,  J1  John,  Hannah,  K1  Jonathan, 
L1  Daniel,  Mercy,  M1  Isaac,  Mary  and  Sarah. 

MARY — b  in  Wethersfield,  Ct,  Jan  27,  1650,  died  young. 

J1  JOHN— b  in  Wethersfield  Apl  12,  1655,  lived  and  died  in  Glaston- 
bury, Ct,  about  1748,  m  abt  1676  Mary  Wright,  dau  Thomas  Wright 
(and  the  widow  of  John  Elson),  who  lived  on  "  Wright's  Island  "  in  the 
Connecticut  River.  He  owned  the  "  Hubbard  Lots,"  which  his  father 
left  to  him  when  he  removed  to  Hadley  and  which  were  largely  aug- 
mented by  the  purchase  of  the  George  Wyllis*  tract  of  185  acres.  On 
this  tract  is  located  the  old  cemetery  which  adjoins  the  "  meeting-house 
green,"  donated  to  the  town  by  JOHN  HUBBARD  and  Samuel  Smith 
in  1692,  each  giving  five  acres.  On  it  is  now  the  one-story  town-hall, 
the  congregation  having  moved  into  more  central  quarters  and  con- 
structed a  finer  edifice.  He  owned  365  acres  in  17 13,  one  tract  of  205 
acres  being  "on  the  Hebron  line,"  and  was  rated  worth  ^"102.  \os.  In 
1707,  when  Glastonbury  had  acquired  6,000  acres  by  a  second  purchase, 
he  was  granted  60  acres  more  with  others  "  in  consideration  of  their  ex- 
traordinary charges  and  good  service."  In  1704  he  was  called  sergeant 
and  was  on  the  school  committee,  and  was  permitted  to  build  a  saw-mill 
on  Roaring  Brook.  From  1700  to  1724  he  served  as  representative  to 
the  legislature.  Children — J3  John,  J3  Isaac,  J4  David,  J5  Ephraim 
(see  elsewhere),  and  Sarah  (b  1683  in  Glastonbury,  m  (?)  Abraham  Hol- 
lister — b  May  5,  1705 — son  of  John  and  Abiah  Hollister  of  Wethersfield, 
and  had  nine  children). 

HANNAH— b  in  Wethersfield  Dec  5,  1656,  d  in  1662. 

K1  JONATHAN— b  in  Wethersfield  Jan  3,  1658-9,  d  in  Concord,f  Mass, 

Gregory  Stone  of  Cambridge,  Mass.),  and  children  Joseph,  William,  Sarah.  Elizabeth  and  John. 
George  (second)  had  wife  Susan  Raven  and  children  Elizabeth,  Samuel.  Hannah,  Abigail,  Sarah  and 
Susannah.  Robert  (third)  and  Mary  ( sheafe)  Merriam  had  no  children.  (The  latter  couple  are  buried 
in  the  Old  Hill  Cemetery  in  Concord  in  the  Hubbard  burial  plot.  She  d  July  22,  1693,  aged  72,  and  he 
Feb  15,1681,  aged  72— tombstone  standing -1894).  Bond's  Genealogies  and  History  of  Watertown, 
Mass.,  says  :  "  His  wife  s  name  does  not  appear  in  the  records,  but  he  was  a  brother-in-law  of  Deacon 
Robert  Merriam  of  Concord."  It  would  thus  seem  that  she  was  the  sister  of  Joseph,  George,  and 
Deacon  Robert  Merriam. 

*  He  came  from  Fenny  Compton,  Eng.,  and  was  Lieutenant-Governor  of  Connecticut  in  1641  and 
its  Governor  the  next  year ;  he  died  in  1644,  leaving  his  estate  to  his  son  Samuel  who  was  a  large 
landholder. 

t  Concord  is  old,  famous,  historic  and  beautiful,  and  was  incorporated  September  12,  1635.  It  has 
not  yet  been  invaded  by  noisy  manufactories,  and  its  air  of  intellectual  repose  must  have  suited  most 
agreeably  such  personages  as  Ralph  Waldo  Emarson,  Nathaniel  Hawthorne,  Henry  David  Thoreau, 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  MERRIAM.  215 

July  17, 1728,  to  which  place*  he  (?)  removed  as  early  as  16S0,  m  there  Jan 
15,  16S1,  Hannah  Rice — b  1658,  d  in  Concord  Apl  9,  1747 — dan  Samuel 
and  Elizabeth  (King-)  Rice  of  Sudbury  and  Marlboro,  Mass,  and  gr  dau 
of  Edmund  and  Thamezin  Rice.  Children — Mary  (b  Apl  3,  1682,  d 
Feb  2,  1769,  m  in  1698  Daniel  Davis — d  Feb  11,  1741 — son  Samuel  and 
Mary  (Meade)  Davis  of  Bedford,  Mass,  and  had  eight  children), 
K2  Jonathan  (see  elsewhere),  Hannah  (b  Apl  20,  16S5,  d  in  Concord 
May  23,  1725,  m  John  Temple),  K3  Samuel  (see  elsewhere),  K4  J oseph 
(see  elsewhere),  Elizabeth  (b  June  16,  1691,  d  in  Concord  Dec  25,  1757, 
m  Mch  24,  1709-10,  Dea  Samuel  Haywood  of  Concord — b  1687,  d  in 
Concord  Oct  28,  1750 — son  of  Dea  John  Haywood),  K5  John,  Kg  Daniel, 
Kr  Thomas  (see  elsewhere),  Abigail  (b  Jan  23,   1698,  m  Jan  18,  1721-2, 

(1)  Samuel  Fletcher — b  Nov  30,  1692 — and  (2)  Bradstreet),  and 

Ks  Ebenezer  (see  elsewhere). 

L1  DAXIEL— b  in  Hadley  Mch  9,  166 r,  d  in  Hatfield  Feb  12,  1744,  m 
Nov  1,  16S3.  Esther  Rice  (b  Sep  18,  1665,  d  Feb  11,  1744),  sister  to  Han- 
nah. Her  father's  will  of  Feb  10,  1665,  left  his  property  to  "  daughters 
Hannah  [Rice]  Hubbard  and  Esther  [Ricej  Hubbard."  DAXIEL  was 
made  freeman  in  1690.  Children — Esther  (b  Jan  17,  1685,  m  Nov  13, 
1707,  Leonard  Hoar — Poor?),  Ann  (b  July  13,  1687,  d  May  13,  168S), 
D  \mki,  (b  May  7,  16S9,  m  Sarah  Southard  and  lived  in  Brimfield,  Mass), 
Ann  (b  July  10,  1691),  Mary  (b  Jan  11,  1694,  m  Dec  15,1715,  Peter 
Montague,  Jr.),  Elizabeth  (b  Apl  5,  1695),  J.'-1  Samuel  (see  elsewhere), 
Rachel  (b  Oct  16,  1698,  m  Sep  13,  1729,  Gabriel  Williams),  L3  Edmund 
(see  elsewhere),  Joseph  (b  June  5,  1702,  d  Nov  26, 1706),  Joshua  (b  July 
23,  1705,  d  Aug  7,  1705),  and  Rebecca  (b  Sep  18,  1706,  m  May  13,  1727, 
Jacob  Williams). 

MERCY — b  in  Hadley  Feb  23,  1664,  m  Oct  22,  1685,  Ensign,  after- 
ward Lieut.  Jonathan  Boardman — b  1660,  d  Sep,  1712 — son  Samuel  and 
Mary  Iioardman  of  Wethersfield.  They  were  married  by  Peter  Tilton, 
Esq.     Children — Mercy,  Joseph,  Jonathan,  Abigail  and  Hepzibah. 

IYI1  ISAAC — b  in  Hadley  Jan  16,  1667,  d  in  Sunderland,  Mass,  Aug  7, 
1750,  m  Anne  Warner — d  June  26,  1750 — dau  Daniel  Warner;  lived  in 
Hatfield  until  17 14;  was  "  Deacon  "  at  Sunderland  and  a  member  of  the 

Louisa  M.  Alcott,  Senator  George  Frisbie  Hoar,  Daniel  C.  French,  and  other  well-known  Americans 
win  1  "iice  lived  there.  On  the  crest  of  a  steep  hill  facing  the  town  square  stood  the  first  meeting- 
house, and  around  the  south  slope  were  scattered  the  houses  of  the  first  Inhabitants  and  the  town 
Around  the  church  was  the  cemetery,  laid  out  upon  a  hill,  and  In  it,  close  to  the  path  leading 
to  the  apex,  is  the  Hubbard  and  Merriam  burial  plat.  John  Hubbard  married  a  Merriam,  but  the 
compiler  is  of  opinion  that  there  might  have  been  another,  a  blood  relationship,  between  these 
families  in  Old  England. 

There  is  a  record,  however,  in  Wethersfield  showing  that  in  1684  the  surveyors  assigned  a  lot  in 
Naubuo  Farms  to  one  Jonathan  Hubert.  lie  may  have  owned  this  lot,  even  though  he  had  removed 
to  Concord,  and  afterward  sold  it  to  his  brother  John,  who  it  would  appear  owned  it  in  1690. 


2I6  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

council  that  installed  at  Northampton,  Mass.,  the  famous  preacher  Rev. 
Jonathan  Edwards.  Children— (M2  John,  M3  Isaac,  see  elsewhere),  Mary 
(b  Feb  25,  1697),  M4  Daniel  (see  elsewhere),  Hannah  (b  Sep  7,  1701,  m 
1727  Nathaniel  Mattoon),  (M5  Jonathan,  M6  Joseph,  M7  David,  see  else- 
where).* 

MARY— b  in  Hadley  Apl  10,  1669,  m  Dec  12,  1688,  Daniel  Warner, 
b  1666,  d  Mch  12,  1754,  lived  in  Hatfield,  Hadley,  and  rem  to  Hardwick, 
Mass.  He  was  the  son  of  Daniel  and  Mary  Warner  and  grandson  of 
Andrew  Warner  of  Hatfield,  Gloucestershire,  Eng.;  in  Cambridge,  Mass, 
1632;  freeman  May  14,  1634;  sent  by  Gov.  John  Winthrop  as  one  of  two 
commissioners  to  control  Connecticut  affairs  in  1635-6;  settled  in  Hart- 
ford on  his  home-lot  as  original  proprietor  in  1639  on  south  bank  of 

Little    River;  married   in    Hartford    Hester  ,  d  1693,  widow   of 

Thomas  Selden,  removing  with  Rev.  John  Russell's  band  to  Hadley  in 
1659,  dying  there  Dec  18,  1684,  aged  about  90. 

SARAH — b  in  Hadley  Nov  12,  1672,  m  Samuel  Cowles. 

SONS    OF    JOHN    AND    MARY    (WRIGHT)    HUBBARD. 

J2  JOHN— bin  Glastonbury  1677,  m  June  17,  1708,  Mary  Kimberly— 
b  Oct  29,  1683 — dau  Eleazer  Kimberly,  b  1638,  the  first  male  child  in 
New  Haven  Colony,  schoolmaster,  Wethersfield  church  and  town  clerk, 
Colonial  Secretary  from  1696  until  death,  Dec  3,  1709,  son  of  Thomas 
Kimberly  of  New  Haven.  JOHN  HUBBARD  was  granted  60  acres  by 
the  town  in  1713,  and  was  rated  worth  £6$.  10.  In  1730  he  was  allowed 
to  build  a  new  "  saw -mill  on  Roaring  Brook  where  the  old  one  was." 
He  had  about  39  acres  of  land  from  his  father  in  17 19.  Children — Mary 
(b  1707),  Abigail  (b  17 10),  and  John,  eldest  (b  1706,  received  land  from 
his  father  in  1736,  m  July,  1732,  Martha  Hollister— b  Mch  30,  17 12— dau 
John  and  Abiah  Hollister  of  Wethersfield,  and  had  John,  b  1734,  d  y; 
Eliska,h  1736;  Elisabeth,  b  it$S;  John,  b  1739;  Timothy, b  1742;  Martha, 
b  1744;  Mary,  b  1746,  m  Josiah  Goodrich;  Ann,  b  1748;  JcrusJia  and 
Jemima,  twins,  b  1750;  and  Joseph,  b  1752,  m  Elizabeth  Ford,  rem  to 
New  Lebanon,  N.  Y.,  and  had  Nancy  who  m  John  Hubbard,  Joseph  b 
17S1,  Noah  b  1783,  Lucy  b  1785,  Timothy  b  1787  of  Cherry  Valley,  N.  Y., 
Elijah  b  1789  of  Norwich,  N.  Y.,  m  Althea  Badger  and  had  Harvey, 
James,  Julia,  William,  Jane,  Adelaide,  Burdette,  Rufus  and  Andrew— 
Rhoda  b  17 91,  Harvey  b  1793,  Sophia  b  1797,  and  John  b  1795  of  Canaan, 
N.  Y.,  m  Almira  Mead  and  had  Harvey,  John,  George  and  Julia,  and 
possibly  others. 

*  A  valued  genealogical  correspondent  writes  that  ISAAC  HUBBARD  had  children  John,  Isaac, 
Mart,  Daniel,  Anna,  Mary,  Elizabeth,  Samuel,  Rachel,  Edmund,  Joseph,  Joshua  and  Rebecca. 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  MERRIAM.  217 

is  ISAAC— b  in  Glastonbury  1679;  received  land  from  his  father  in 
1725;  supposed  to  have  afterward  rem  to  Ellington,  Ct,  and  died  there; 
m  abt  1700  Hannah  Dickinson.    Children— Hannah  (b  1703)  and  Isaac 
(b   1701,  owned  land  in  Glastonbury  in  1736,  m  Hannah  Goodrich  of 
Tolland,  Ct,  and  had  (copied  from  Douglas  Hubbard's  "  Tree")  Isaac,* 
1728  m  Prudence  Nash  and  had  Martha;   George,  b  1731,  d  y;   George,  b 
1733'  d  v    (')  Honore,  b  Jan  1,  1734,  d  Jan  31,  1789,  m  Feb  10,  1757,  (1) 
Lieut.  Stephen  White— b  Jan  17,  1731,  d  Nov  23,  '774— son  Dea  Joseph 
White  of  East  Middletown,  Ct,  and  had  six  children;  she  m  (2)  Capt. 
Thomas  Wadsworth— b  1716,  d  1783— of  East  Hartford,  Ct;  Sarah,* 
i735;  Hezekiah,  b  i737,  m  Mabel  Hubbard  of  Hadley,  Mass,  and  had 
J6  Hezekiah  (see  elsewhere),  Mabel  b  1772  d  unm,  Lucretia  b  1774,  m 
William  Jones,  Hannah  b   1776  d  unm,  and  John  b   1778  went  West; 
V  George  (see  elsewhere);  Hannah,  h  1742;  Chloe,  b  1744;  Lucy,  1747; 
Joseph**  1749;  Lemuel,  b  1751;  and  Jonathan  b   r 746,  lived  in  Berlin, 
Ct    m' Abigail  Hills  and  had   Richard,  b  1770,  d  1S00;  Abigail,  b  1772: 
Sarah  b  1774;  Benjamin,  b  1776,  d  1814;  Jonathan,  b  1784,  d  17SS;  and 
Lemuel  b  1780,  lived  in  Berlin  m  Elizabeth  Dudley  and  had  Jonathan,  b 
1810  d  '1824;  Elizabeth,  b  1812;  Adelia,  b  1816;  Lemuel,  b  1818,  rem  to 
Sand   Spring,  Iowa;  and    Richard    Dudley   (see    Prominent  American 

Hubbards). 

J4  DAVID— b  in  Glastonbury  1685,  d  there  Oct  13,  1760,  m  Prudence 
Goodrich-b  June  18,  1701,  d  Nov  29,  1793— widow  Judah  Holcomb  and 
dan  David  and  Prudence  (Churchill)  Goodrich;  had  land  from  his  father 
in   Glastonbury  in   1723;  member  of  Eastbury  School  Society,  whose 
records  in   1749  mention  him  as  "Captain  D.  Hubbard,  2  w,  3  d,  and 
boarding  himself  £12.  55.";  same  year  there  is  "liberty  granted  to  Capt. 
David  Hubbard  to  erect  a  corn-mill  over  Blackleach  River;"  served  as 
legislator  eight  terms  between  1724  and  1734.    Children— David  (b  1722, 
d&i76o  in  Glastonbury;  had  land  from  his  father  in   1760;  m  Abigail 
Alcott,  dau  Nathaniel  Alcott  of  East  Hartford,  and  had  David,  b  1750; 
Josiah*  1753,  in  Rev.  War;  Nathaniel,  b  1755,  d  Aug>  l844,  of  Bolton, 
m  (1)  Flora  Alvord,  (2)  Anne  Alvord  d  1789,  (3)  Sarah  Kingsbury  d 
1804,  and  had  Josiah  b  17S4  m  Aurora  Gibson;    Elijah  b  17S6  m  Sarah 
Goodall;  Nathaniel  b  179°  m  Betsey  Taylor;  Eunice  b  1791  m  Flavel 
Talcott;  Anne  b  1793  m  Elijah  Talcott;   Edward  b  1795  m  (1)  Sophia  v. 
Hale,  (2)  Lucy  Phillips  and  had  10  children;  Florietta  b  1797  m  Elijah"" 
Talcott;  Laura  b  1799  m  Edward  Griswold;   and  Dennison  b  1S05,  Dr., 
m  Pamelia  Hubbard  and  had  Charles  of  Essex,  Ct,  Agnes  and  Edward; 
Abigail,  b  1759;  and  Elijah,  b  1760— posthumous),  and  Hezekiah  (b  in 
Glastonbury  in  1728,  d  there  Sep  24,  1783.  Rev.  soldier,  had  land  from 
his  father  in  1752,  m  Dec  10,  1752,  Hannah  Olcutt— she  afterward  m  (2) 


2I3  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY, 

Post  and   (3)   Ichabod  Phelps— b  1731,  d  Feb  5,  1813,  sister  to 


Abigail  Olcutt,  and  had  Hezekiah,  b  Oct  28,  1753,  in  Rev.  War,  d  Jan  12, 
1783;  Ann,  b  Nov  18,  1755,  m  Jndah  Holcomb  of  Granby;  Elizabeth,  b 
1757,  d  May  9,  1768;  J8  Elizur  (see  elsewhere);  Asahel  (b  Oct  18,  1762, 
d  May  20,  1768;  Hannah,  b  Dec  8,  1764,  d  May  13,  1783;  John,  b  Feb  13, 
1763,  rem  to  Vermont,  m  Nancy  Hubbard  and  had  John,  Rowley,  Har- 
rison, Adolphus,  and  Cyrus;  Roswell,  b  1769;  and  George,  b  1772,  d  Sep 

3°,  *775- 

J5  EPHRAIM— b  1695  in  Glastonbury,  d  there  Sep  14,  1780,  deacon, 

farmer,  lived  southwest  of  Diamond  Pond  near  Eastbury,  on  land  rated 

in  1724' worth  ^54,  m  Mary  Lord,  b  1696,  d  Mch  8,  1772.    Children  (born 

in  Glastonbury)— Ephraim  (b  17 19,  lived  and  died  in  Glastonbury  Mch 

8   1779,  m  (?)  Abigail ,  and  had  Elijah*  and  Asahel,  b  1766,  d  in 

Glastonbury  Sep  21,  1790),  J9  Jonathan  (see  elsewhere),  Elizur  (b  1722, 

d  in  Glastonbury  Sep  14,  18  [illegible],  prominent  citizen,  in  Rev.  War, 

m    Abigail    Hollister,    and    had    (?)   Elijah;*   also   Elizur,   b    1746,   d 

Sep  14,  1818,   Captain  in  Rev.  War  f,  m  Huldah  House  of  Plymouth, 

Vt,  and  had  Ephraim  b  1770;  Elijah  b  1775;  Huldah  b  1779;  Jeremiah 

b  1781;  Luther  b  1783;  and  Reuben  b  in  Windsor,  Vt,  1771,  m  1797 

Lucy  Stack,  rem  to  Sharon,  Vt.,  and  had  Horace,  Lucinda,  Danforth, 

Solon,  Artemas,  Lucy,  Chester,  Lorenzo,  Pamelia,  Susan,  Charles  who 

m  Mary  Elizabeth  Crawford  and  had  6  children,  Sophronia  and  Martha), 

Mary  (b  1724,  m  John  Kimberly,  son  Thomas  Kimberly),  Hepsibah  (b 

1726,  d  Aug  7,  1733),  and  Elijah  (b  1733,  d  Oct  5,  1755). 

SON    OF    HEZEKIAH    AND    MABEL    (HUBBARD)    HUBBARD. 

je  HEZEKIAH— b  in  Hadley,  Mass,  in  1770,  d  there  1S55,  m  there 
Tamasau  Andrews  of  (?)  same  place.  Children— Elish a  (b  1797,  m 
Mary  Falley,  rem  to  Iowa  and  had  Mary  b  1830,  m  Dr.  Martin  Morse- 
man),  Richard  Dunning  (b  Mch  10,  1799,  rem  to  Fulton,  N.  Y.,  m  Aug 
28,  1 82 1,  Charlotte  Moody,  b  June  18,  1800,  and  had  Anna,  b  Sep,  1822, 
m  George  Terry;  Norman  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line  Rev.  Warren 
Calhoun   Hubbard);    Warren,  b   1828,   m  Caroline   Patterson,  and  had 


*  Tombstone  in  Glastonbury  cemetery  reads:  "  Elijah,  son  of  Ephraim  and  Abigail,  died  in  Octo- 
ber, 1782,  aged  26,  at  Jamaica."  [Jamaica,  West  Indies.]  Glastonbury  Church  Records  read:  "April 
15,  1783.  Elijah  Hubbard,  son  of  Eleazer  Hubbard,  died  at  Jamaica  in  captivity."  The  data  about  this 
period  being  imperfectly  preserved,  the  compiler  has  not  absolute  confidence  in  much  of  this  herein 
given. 

+  Intelligence  of  affairs  at  Concord  and  Lexington  reached  here  [Glastonbury]  by  express  on 
Sunday  following,  and  was  announced  by  the  reverend  and  patriotic  cousins  from  their  respective 
pulpits.  The  rest  of  the  day  was  spent  by  members  of  the  militia  in  casting  bullets,  replenishing  car- 
tridge-boxes, and  repairing  firelocks.  On  Monday  morning  a  large  company  assembled  at  the  house 
of  Captain  Elizur  Hubbard,  in  Eastbury,  and  under  his  command  started  for  Boston.—  Goslee's  Hist. 
Glastonbury. 


REV.    WARREN    CALHOUN    HUBBARD 

of  Rochester,  N.  Y. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford,  Ct.) 


2  I  (J 


220  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Henry,  Cora,  Edward  and  Frederick;  Henry,  b    1830,  m   Ellen ; 

Dudley,  b  1S33,  d  unm;  James,  b  1835,  m  Anna  Foster,  and  had  Dudley 
and  Mabel,  Edward,  b  1837,  d  y;  Eleanor,  b  Oct  19,  1839,  m  Charles  H. 
David;  and  Charlotte,  b  May  13,  1841,  m  Llewellyn  Allen),  Norman 
Asa  (b  1801,  m  Sarah  Falley,  and  had  James  Frederick,  who  had  Norman 
Asa,  Frederick  Spelman  and  Fannie),  Cecil  (b  1803),  Dudley  (b  1805,  m 
Patty  ),  Ashp.el  (m  Laura  ),  Mabel  (1808,  m  John  Rey- 
nolds), and  Eleanor  (b  1809,  m  Isaac  Fowler). 

SON    OF    ISAAC    AND    HANNAH    (GOODRICH)    HUBBARD. 

J7  GEORGE  (copied  from  Douglas  Hubbard's  "  Tree  ")— b  in  Tol- 
land, Ct.,  in  1739,  m  Thankful  Hatch,  and  about  1758  rem  to  Windsor, 
Vt.,  and  thence  to  Claremont,  N.  H.  Children — Calvin  (b  1761,  lived  in 
Springfield,  Vt.,  111  (1)  Ruth  Meacham,  (2)  Sarah  Meacham,  and  had 
Calvin  b  1795,  Dr.,  who  m  Eliza  Woodbury,  and  had  Hon  Josiah,  b  1826, 
Dartmouth  1847,  lived  in  Boston,  Mass.,  m  Mary  Batcheller  and  had 
Mary  and  Alfred;  Horace  b  1793,  m  and  had  George,  John  and  Eliza- 
beth; Ruth  b  1797;  Anne  b  1799,  m  James  Cleveland;  Laura  b  1801; 
Pamelia  b  1S03,  111  John  Nichols;  and  Sarah  b  1805,  111  Daniel  Keyes), 
Chloe  (b  1763),  George  (b  1765,  m  Mehetable  Tyler,  lived  in  Lebanon, 
Vt.,  and  had  Fanny,  who  111  Zabina  Marsh,  Henry,  who  111  (1)  Sarah 
Welch,  (2)  Cynthia  Gould,  Mehetable,  who  m  Zabina  Marsh,  Orin,  who 
m  Catherine  Weld,  and  Benjamin,  Dr.,  who  m  Abigail  Bruce  of  West- 
minster, Vt.,  and  had  6  children),  Jonathan  (see  Prominent  American 
Hubbards),  Isaac  (b  1770,  m  (1)  Caroline  Jones  and  had  Caroline  h  1802, 
m  Charles  Long;  he  then  111  (2)  in  1805  Ruth  Cobb  andhad^wc^b 
1807,  m  Caroline  Fiske;  Sarah  b  1809,  m  Joel  Clapp;  and  Isaac  b  1818, 
Rev.,  111  Elizabeth  Stimpson,  and  had  William,  George,  Ruth,  and  Char- 
lotte), Eliezur  (b  1775,  U.  S.  District  Judge  in  Arkansas  1809,  lived  in 
Windsor,  Vt.,  in  181 9,  m  Abigail  Sage  and  had  Gurdon  (see  Prominent 
American  Hubbards);  Elizabeth  b  1804;  Christopher  b  1806,  m  Selina 
Jackson  of  N.  Y.;  Mary  b  1808,  111  William  Clark;  Abigail  b  1810,  m 
Alfred  Castleman;  and  Hannah  b  1815,  m  Ebenezer  Jackson),  Ahira* 
(b  1779,  m  Serena  Tucker  of  Roxbury,  Mass.,  rem  to  Chicago  and  had 
Pamelia  b  1806;  Henry  George,  b  1807,  d  Aug  28,  1853,  m  Juliette  Elvira 
Smith,  d  Oct  24,  1892,  and  had  George  b  1839;  Edward  b  1841;  Mary  b 
1843;  Juliet  b  1845,  m  John  Lockwood;  Henry  b  1S47,  111  Therese  Carter; 
Harriet  b  1849,  m  Herbert  Ayer;  and  May  b  1852,  m  Alex  Wetherell, 
U.  S.  A.;  Charles  b  1809;  Edward b  181 1;  Harriet  b  181 2;  Ann  b  18 14, 
m  Gurdon  Saltonstall  Hubbard;  Eliza  b  1815;  and  Ellen  b  181 7),  and 
Pamelia*  (b  1781). 

*Dr.  Alvan  Talcott's  records,  town  clerk's  office,  Guilford,  Ct.,  give  1783  as  his  birth  and  Panielia's 
1777. 


JOHN  II  i  TBBA  RD  <  I ND  MA  R  \ "  MERRIA  M.  2  2 1 

SON    OF    HEZEKIAH    AND    HANNAH    (OLCUTT)    HUBBARD. 

js  ELIZUR— b  in  Glastonbury  June  14,  1760,  d  1830,  Rev.  War  in 
1777,  m  (1)  Lois  Wright— d  Sep  15,  1794— dau  James  and  Lois  (Loomis) 
Wright  of  Manhannock  or  Wright's  Island,  Connecticut  River,  Weth- 

ersfield.     He   m   (2)    Huldah  ,  d  Apl  26,  1807.     Children  (b  in 

Glastonbury)— Leonard  (b  1772,  d  1800),  Lois  (b  1774,  m  Mathew 
House,  descendant  William  House,  householder  in  Glastonbury  in  1693), 
HoNORE  (b  1776,  m  Thomas  Harrington  or  Humiston),  Joseph  (b  1780, 
d  1845,  m  abt  1802  Mabel  Wadsworth— d  1815  in  Glastonbury— and  had 
Sarah,  b  1803,  m  Harlow  Wrisley;  Leonard,  b  1807,  m  Mrs.  Mahala 
Crampton  (or  Lamphere)  and  had  Henry,  Sarah  and  Lillian;  Elbridge, 
b  1809;  and  Frances,  b  1S11),  Flavel  (b  1782,  d  in  1812,  unm  ?),  and 
David  Elizur  (b  in  1778,  m  Oct  6,  1799,  Pamelia  Hollister— b  Mch  28, 
i778— dau  Elisha  Hollister,  descended  from  John  Hollister  of  Naubuc 
Farms.  He  was  a  prominent  man,  being  Asst.  County  Judge,  repre- 
sentative, state  senator  in  1639,  and  is  buried  with  his  wife  in  a  private 
cemetery  upon  his  land  in  Glastonbury;  they  had  Perez,  b  1802,  m  Cor- 
nelia Felt;  Lois,  b  1804,  m  Elizur  Hollister;  John  Flavel,  b  1806,  m  Lu- 
cretia  Buck;  David  Leonard,  b  1807,  m  Sarah  Caldwell;  Julius  C,  b 
1808,  m  Sarah  Hale,  rem  to  Ohio  and  had  John  and  Anne;  Pamelia,  b 
1S10,  m  Dr.  Dennison  Hubbard;  Susan,  b  181 2,  m  Dr.  David  Griswold; 
and  Ellen,  b  1814,  m  Rev.  Charles  Sanford). 

SON    OF    EPHRAIM    AND    MARY    (LORD)    HUBBARD. 

J9  JONATHAN— b  in  Glastonbury  in  1720,  d  there  Jan  8,  1S06,  m  (1) 
Nancy  Lester,  m  Nov  15,  1753,  (2)  Widow  Sarah  (Smith)  Forbes— d 
Nov  23,  1 781— dau  Samuel  G.  Smith,  and  m  (3)  Jemima  Dickinson,  b 
1739,  d  Aug  26,  1836,  in  Glastonbury,  age  97.  Children — Jonathan  (b 
1754  in  Glastonbury,  d  there  Mch  6,  1787,  m  Prudence  House— b  1755, 
d  May  24,  1815 — and  had  Jemima,  Elizabeth,  Sarah  and  Ira,  b  1784,  m 
Anna  Stratton  and  had  Ira,  b  1810,  m  Maria  Hale  and  had  Sarah,  Jona- 
than, William,  Patience  and  Erastus),  David  (b  in  Glastonbury  Sep  2, 
1758,  d  there  Mch  11,  1806,  deacon;  in  militia,  Rev.  War,  m  June  12, 
1783,  Jemima  Chamberlain— b  1761,  d  Dec  27,  1838— who  was  the  relict 
of  Levi  Ward,  and  had  David,  b  Nov  25,  1785,  d  Nov  10,  1S61,  m  June 
2.  1824,  Jerusha  Hollister— b  Oct  4,  1797,  d  Aug  21,  1877— and  had 
[erusha  Maria,  b  1825,  m  James  B.  Williams;  Amanda  Melinda,  b  1826, 
d  1850;  David  Lyman,  b  1828,  m  Almeda  Child,  and  had  Adeline, 
Guideris  and  Gertrude;  Charlotte,  b  182S,  d  1833;  Elizabeth,  b  1830,  d 
1833;  George  Francis,  b  1834,  only  male  Hubbard  now  living  in  Glas- 
tonbury (except  one  son),  m  Helen  Wright  of  Massachusetts  and  had 
Arthur    and    Frank;    Julia    Elizabeth,    b    1839,  m  widower   James   B. 


222 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Williams,  manufacturer  in  Glastonbury;  Norman,  b  1787,  d  in  Glaston- 
bury 1854,  m  (1)  Nancy  Sellew  and  had  Sarah,  b  1815,  m  Martin  Keeney; 
Sereno,  b  1816,  d  1864,  m  Maria  Dodd  and  had  Lizzie  and  Clarence; 
Harriet,  b  1S19,  m  Norman  Spencer  and  had  Norman,  Sarah,  Harriet 
and  Charles;  Edward,  b  1822,  d  1871,  m  Charlotte  Hunt;  Norman,  b 
1825,  m  (2)  Amelia  Hale;  Rufits,  b  1789,  d  in  Moline,  111.,  18S0,  m  Laura 
Squires  and  had  William,  b  181 2,  m  Clarissa  Wright;  David,  b  1816,  m 
Amelia  Wood;  Anson,  b  181 8,  m  Marietta  Moore;  Maria,  b  1820,  m 
DeWitt  Dimock  and  had  Florence,  Cornelius  and  Cornelia,  b  1834; 
Anson,  b  1 791,  Rev.,  m  (1)  Charlotte  Forbes,  (2)  Caroline  Hubbard  of 
Long  Island;  Luanda,  b  1794,  m  James  Strickland;  AsaJicl,  b  1795, 
rem  to  Mendon,  111.,  m  (1)  Maria  Gaylord,  (2)  Melinda  Baldwin  and  had 
George;  Melinda,  b  1797,  d  y;  Melinda,  b  1799,  m  John  Gaylord; 
JcdutJian,  b  1801,  rem  to  Illinois,  m  Abigail  Talcott  and  had  Abigail, 
David  and  Martha  who  m  Stephen  White;  and  Jonathan,  b  1S01,  rem 
to  Boston  Mills,  Kans.,  m  Caroline  Root  and  had  Cornelia,  Harmon, 
Edward  and  Caroline). 

SONS  OF  JONATHAN   AND    HANNAH   (RICE)   HUBBARD. 

K2  JONATHAN— b  in  Concord,  Mass,  June  18,  1683,  d  in  Townsend, 
Mass,  Apl  7,  1761,  m  Sep  26,  1704,  at  Watertown,  Mass,  by  Jonas  Bond, 
Esq,  Rebecca  Brown  (d  Nov  2,  1 751,  in  Townsend);  lived  awhile  in 
Groton,  Mass,  where  four  children  were  born;  rem  to  Townsend; 
selectman  there  1748  to  1752;  "major,"  deacon,  town  treasurer,  and  one 
of  original  founders  of  Rindge,  N.  H.;  lived  also  in  Lunenburg,  Mass. 
Children— Rebecca  (b  in  Concord  Feb  11,  17 10,  m  Joseph  Blanchard), 
Grace  (b  in  Concord  Jan  9,  i7I2)/Hannah  (b  in  Concord  Nov  14,  17 14, 
m  Nov  23,  1732,  Col  Josiah  Willard,  one  of  the  first  founders  of  Win- 
chester, N.  H.),  Ruth  (b  in  Concord  Jan  11,  1716,0!  Nov  1,  1788,  in 
Keene,  N.  H.,  m  Apl  7,  1736  (r)  Rev  David  Stevens  of  Lunenburg  and 
Nov  9,  1786,(2)  Rev  Aaron  Whitney  of  Petersham,  Mass).  K9  Jona- 
than (see  elsewhere),  Abigail  (bin  Groton  June  25,  1721,  m  Dec  25, 
1738,  Oliver  Farwell  of  Dunstable,  Mass),  daughter  (b  in  Groton  Sep  22, 
1722,  m  Col  Thomas  Blanchard  of  Dunstable),  John  (b  in  Groton  May 
24,  1723,  d  Feb  17,  1724),  Mary  (b  in  Groton  Apl  12,  1725,  m  July  21, 
1740,  (1)  John  Jennison  of  Lunenburg,  d  1751,  and  Apl  21,  1758,  (2)  Col 
Benjamin  Bellows  of  "Bellows  Falls,"  founder  of  Walpole,  N.  H.),  and 
John  (h  in  Groton  Apl  23,  1727,  d  Feb  20,  1759,  m  Mch  20,  1749  (1) 
Hannah  Johnson,  d  Apl  3,  1754,  and  m  Jan   8,    1755    (2)  Mary  Ball  of 

Townsend  who  afterward  m Baldwin  of  Templeton,  Mass.    John 

had  by  Hannah  Johnson:  Josiah,  b  Jan  12,  1749,  d  Sept  7,  1773;  Rebecca, 
b  May  14,  1751,  m  about  1770  John  Bellows  of  Walpole;  Hannah,  b  June 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AXD  MARY  MERRIAM.  22, 

14,  1753,  d  Oct  30,  1753.  John  had  by  Mary  Ball:  Hannah,  b  June  14, 
1756,  d  May  12,  1777;  and  (Prof.)  John  (see  Prominent  American  Hub- 
bards). 

K3  SAMUEL — b  in  Concord  Apl  27,  1687,  d  there  Dec  12,  1753,  m 
Jan  15,  1709  (1)  Sarah  Clark  of  Concord  (b  July  13,  i68i,d  July  25,  1720) 
and  after  1720  m  (2)  Prudence  Temple.  Children  (by  Sarah  Clark) — 
Ephraim  (b  Nov  8,  17 10,  m  June  6,  1744,  Sarah  Billings),  Mary  (b  May 
4,  1712),  K10  Samuel  (see  elsewhere),  Sarah  (b  Sep  24,  17 16),  Lois  (b 
June  6,  1718),  and  K11  Joseph  (see  elsewhere).  Children  (by  Prudence 
Temple) — Lydia  (b  Apl  6,  1722),  Silence  (b  Nov  17,  1725),  and  Isaac 
(b  Sep  17,  1729,  d  Aug  i4j  1804,  m  Feb  27,  1753,  (?)  Sarah  Darby  and 
had  Samuel,  b  Mch  21,  1754;  Sarah, b  Apl  12,  1756;  Lucy,  b  June  1, 
1760;  and  Elizabeth,  b  Feb  1,  177 1). 

K4  JOSEPH— b  Feb  8,  1688-9,  d  Apl  10,  176S,  m  Nov  10,  1713,  Re- 
becca Bulkeley,  b  Dec  25,  1695,  in  Concord,  d  Jan  29,  1772,  dau  Capt 
Joseph  and  Rebecca  (Jones-Minott)  Bulkeley  of  Concord.  Both  lived 
and  died  there;  he  was  called  "captain"  and  on  his  gravestone  in  the 
central  graveyard  in  Concord,  still  standing  (1894),  it  reads  that  "he 
was  a  loving  husband,  a  kind  father  in  life,  and  at  death  greatly  la- 
mented." Children — Joseph  (b  Jan  11,  1714,  m  Aug  18,  1743,  Abigail 
Brown),  Rebecca  (b  July  11,  1717),  Elizabeth  (b  Sep  23,  1720,  m  Mch 
24.  1740,  (1)  Israel  Howe,  and  May  15,  1750,  (2)  Stephen  Barrett,  son  of 
Benjamin  and  Lydia  (Minott)  Barrett,  and  had  Stephen  b  in  Paxton, 
Mass,  Feb  8,  1753,  who  rem  with  wife,  two  children  and  aged  mother  to 
Oneida  Co,  N.  Y.),  Lucy  (b  Dec  14,  1722,  d  y),  Abigail  (b  Feb  20,  1724, 
m  Mch  15,  1742,  David  Howe),  Peter  (b  Nov  14,  1727,  d  Apl  16,  1753, 
m  Dec  20,  1750,  Mary  Adams  and  had  Peter,  b  Jan  1,  1752,  d  Julv  23, 
1753),  Lucy  (b  June  8,  1730,  twin),  Thomas  (b  June  8,  1730,  d  Oct  12, 
1810,  "captain  in  Rev.  War,"  m  Nov  1,  1753  Abigail  Brown  and  had 
Abigail,  b  Aug  26,  1754,  m  Joseph  Davis;  Rebecca,  b  Dec  22,  1757,  m 
Abijah  Warren;  Jonathan,  b  Oct  28,  1761,  d  Apl  29,  1776;  Thomas,  b 
July  16,  1766,  d  Jan  3,  1767-8;  K12  Thomas  (see  elsewhere),  and  Lucy,  b 
Aug  16,  1775,  m  John  Rice),  and  Hannah  (b  Jan  18,  1735). 

K5JOHN — b  Mch  12,  1692-3,111  (1)  Hannah  Blood,  d  in  Worcester, 
Mass,  in  1727,  and  (2)  Azubah  Moore  of  Sudbury,  Mass,  settled  and  lived 
some  time  in  Worcester  but  rem  to  Rutland  (?Mass)  in  1728,  "and 
erected  a  mill  on  Mill  Brook.  He  was  called  '  captain,'  and  was  an 
active,  enterprising  and  useful  man  in  civil,  ecclesiastical,  and  military 
affairs.  He  had  several  daughters  by  his  first  wife  and  several  by  his 
second,  five  of  whom  with  two  sons  died  young.  Capt.  HUBBARD 
in  advanced  age  sold  his  estate  in  Rutland,  Mass,  and  went  to  spend  his 
last  days    with    his    daughter    Abigail.      He   had  five  other    married 


224  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

daughters."— Hist,  of  Rutland.  Children— Hannah  (b  1723,  m  May 
3  [733,  Lieut.  Paul  More  of  Holden  and  had  Esther  who  m  Stephen 
Church  and  had  Rev  John  Hubbard  Church,  D.  D.,  of  Pelham,  N.  H.), 
Abigail  (b  1725,  m  Charles  Heywood  and  lived  in  Holden),  Mercy  (b 
I747^  j  X\y\  21,  1825,  m  K17  Elisha  Hubbard,  b  in  Holden,  Mass, 
in  1744,  d  there  in  1S14,  see  elsewhere),  and  other  daughters,  names 
unknown. 

K,!  DANIEL — b  Nov  20,  1694,  m  Dec  5,  17 17,  Dorothy  Dakin  of  Hol- 
den, where  he  settled.  Children— Dorothy  (b  Mch  24,  17 18),  Beulah 
(b  Dec  28,  1720),  Martha  (b  Oct  18,  1722),  Rebecca  (b  June  10,  1724), 
and  Daniel  (b  Jan  18,   1725). 

K"  THOMAS — b  in  Concord  Aug  27,  1696,  m  Mary  Fletcher  of  Con- 
cord. Children— (?)  Abigail  (b  1721),  Mary  (b  June  21,  1725),  Huldah 
(b  1727),  and  Nathan  (b  in  Concord  Feb  23,  1723-4,  lived  in  Groton,  m 
Apl  2,  1745,  Mary  Patterson  and  had  (K13  Thomas,  K14  Nathan,  K15  Heze- 
kiah,  see  elsewhere),  Mary  b  Jan  9,  1749;  Betty  b  Dec  24,  1750;  Phinehas 
b  Feb  25,  1751,  d  Mch  10,  1786;  Jonathan  b  1753,  d  Oct  2,  1757;  Lucy  b 
Aug  20,  1757;  Elizabeth  b — ,  m  Amos  Lawrence;  Hannah  b  July  10, 
1761,  d  Mch  6,  1795;  Susannah  b  Oct  3, 1763,111  Joseph  Bancroft;  Abigail 
b  April  13,  1 765 ;  and  Emma  or  "  A  my  "  b  — ,  m  Joseph  Morse  and  lived 
in  Rindge,  N.  H.). 

|(8  EBENEZER  (following  data  not  absolutely  reliable)— b  Dec  28, 

1700,  d  May  21,  1755,  m  Mary (b  July  16,  1704,  din  Concord  Nov 

30,  1763,  the  wife  of  Andrew  Conant)  and  lived  in  Concord.  He  is 
called  "Cornet "  EBENEZER  HUBBARD  on  his  tombstone  in  the  Hill 
Cemetery  at  Concord.  Children — EBENEZER(b  Mch  21,  1725,  dOct  1, 1807, 

m  Hannah (b  1732,  d  Jan  27,  1807)  and  had  Hannah  b  Jan  29,  1753; 

DavzdbSep  16,  1754,111  Apl  18,  1778,  Mary  Barrett  and  had  David, 
Eben,  Silas,  Mary,  Sarah  and  Betsey;  Ebcnczcr  b  May  22,  1758,  Har- 
vard 1782,  d  1800;  Mclisccnt  b  July  4,  1760;  Phebe  b  Oct  31,  1762,  d  June 
1,  1766;  Sarah  b  Feb  3,  1765;  Phcbe  b  Feb  7,  1767,  d  Feb  25,  1771; 
Joseph  b  Jan  11,  1769;  Samuel b  Nov  24,  1770,  d  Jan  25,  1817;  and  Betsy 
b  July  22,  1774,  d  Sep  12,  1775),  Mary  (b  Oct  19,  1729),  Jonathan  (b 
July  6,  1733,  d  June  13,  1736),  John  (b  July  13,  1737,  d  May  16,  1838), 
Elizabeth  (b  Nov  12,  1740),  David  (b  Dec  2^,  1741,  d  Nov  5,  1746), 
Sarah  (b  Jan  19,  1743),  ancl  Jonathan  (b  Sep  6,  1746,  d  Feb  7, 
1746-7). 

SON  OF  JONATHAN   AND    REBECCA    (BROWN)  HUBBARD. 

K9  JONATHAN— b  Jan  23,  171S-9,  d  June  1,  1759,  111  in  Lunenburg, 
Vt.,  Sept  24,  1739,  Abigail  Jennison.  He  was  one  of  original  grantees  of 
Rindge,  N.  H.,  in  1749,  and  of  Charlestown,  N.  H.,  abt  1757;  surveyor, 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  MERRIAM.  225 

well  educated  and  useful  citizen,  called  "Captain;"  member  Col  Ben- 
jamin Bellows' militia.  Children — Grace  (b  Aug  22,  1740,111  Richard 
Glidden  of  North  Charlestown,  where  both  died),  Abigail  (b  in  Lunen- 
burg Sep  17,  1742,  m  (1) Giles,  (2)  Stephens  of  Goshen, 

N.  H.),  Rebecca  (b  in  Lunenburg  Sep  24,  1744),  Samuel  (d  y),  David 
(b  1746,  d  in  North  Charlestown  Nov  14,  1814,  m  Abigail  Labaree,  b 
Dec  21,  1760,  of  Charlestown,  dau  Peter  and  Ruth  (Putnam)  Labaree, 
and  had  Jotham  b  in  Feb,  1779,  d  y;  Roswell,  b  Jan  29,  1781,  d  Nov  7, 
1819,  m  Jan  22,  1807,  Sophia  Wilson,  b  May  11,  1789,  dau  Joseph  and 
Annis  (Holden)  Wilson,  and  had  Samuel  Wilson,  Josiah  Humphrey, 
William  Holden,  Luman  Farnsworth,  and  Annis  Melinda — see  Abridged 
Descent  Line  Annis  Melinda  Hubbard;  John  b  in  Mch,  1783,  d  y; 
Josiah  b  Jan  24,  1785,  d  Jan  17,  1828,  m  in  Nov,  1812,  Peggy  Allen  and 
had  John  A.,  Horace,*  Martha  and  Sophia;  Asa,  b  Apl  1787,  d  y;  Abigail, 
b  May  17,  1789^  Aug  3,  1843,  m  Jan  25,  iSio,  Moses  Judevine;  David,  b 
July  10,  1791,  d  Feb  1,  1862,  mNo\r9,  1815,  Rosalinda  Westcott;  Susan, 
b  Nov  14,  1794,  d  Aug  20,  1857,  m  Oct,  1813,  Lemuel  Grow ;  Jonathan  B. 
(see  Abridged  Descent  Line  George  Whipple  Hubbard);  Rebecca,  b 
Aug  1,  1798,  m  Levi  Farnsworth,  lived  and  died  in  Stowe,  Vt;  and  Hugh, 
b  Sept,  1800,  d  y),  and  Jonathan  (b  in  Charlestown  1748,  lived  awhile 
in  Mass,  but  returned  to  Charlestown,  d  there  in  1828,  m  Eunice  Wheeler 
dau  Moses  Wheeler  of  Charlestown,  and  had  Fanny,  b  Dec  19,  1777,  m 
Gideon  Kidder — b  1782,  d  1853 — of  Wethersfield,  Vt;  Samuel,  b  Aug  6, 
1781,  farmer,  d  Mch  18,  1S59,  m  181 1  widow  Mary  (Wells)  Allen  of 
East  Windsor,  Ct,  and  had  George,  Mary,  and  Huldah;  Abigail,  b  Dec 
1,  1786,  d  Nov  7,  1833,  m  Godfrey  Cooke,  farmer,  of  Claremont,  N.  H., 
and  had  Catherine  Matilda,  Henry  Hubbard,  George  Wheeler.  Helen 
Maria,  George  Francis  and  Mary  E.;  Sophia,  b  1791,  m  Edward  Reid — 
b  at  Ayr,  Scotland,  in  1777,  d  1844 — and  lived  in  Dalton,  N.  H.,  and  had 
William  Hubbard,  Sophia  Eunice,  Roswell  Hunt,  Edward  Loggie, 
Horace  Hall,  Lewis  Hubbard,  Jane  Elizabeth  and  Catharine  Cook;  Jen- 
nison  J,  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line  Robert  Morris  Hubbard);  and 
Lewis,  b  1796,  went  West  and  disappeared). 

SONS    OF    SAMUEL    AND    SARAH    (CLARK)    HUBBARD. 

K10  SAMUEL — b  in  Holden,  Mass,  17 13,  d  there  Dec  3,  1783,  m  about 
1739  (1)  Eunice  Woodward  (b  1717,  d  Jan  6,  1749)  and  about  1750  (2) 
Abigail  Clarke  (b  1721,  d  Mch  16,  1772);  Rev  soldier,  called  "Lieut." 
Children  (by  Eunice  Woodward) — Sarah  (b  1740),  K16  Samuel  (see  else- 
where), K17  Elisha  (see  elsewhere),  and  Eunice  (b  1746).  Children  (by 
Abigail  Clarke) — K18A-BEL  (see  elsewhere),  Benjamin  (b  1755),  Mary 
(b  1757),  Eli  (b  1761),  Silas  (b  1763),  Levi  (b  1765,  lived  in  Walpolc,  N. 

*  See  Abridged  Descent  Line  of  Charles  Putnam  Hubbard. 


226  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AXD   GENEALOGY. 

H.,  m  (?)  Lydia  White  and  had  Lydia  who  m  Peter  Hall),  and  Clark  (b 

1767). 

K'i  JOSEPH— b  in  Holden    1715,  d  there  July  4,  1799,  m   abt   1740 
Phebe  (Buckley?),  b  1721,  d  Aug  15,  1804.      Children— Phebe  (b  Apl  7, 
1741,  d  v),  Rebecca  (b  Feb  11,  1744,  m  Israel  Davis),  Phebe  (b  July  20, 
1749'  m  Samuel  Hayward),  Joseph  (b  Oct  25,  1751,  d  1832,  m  Milicent 
Melvin  of  Concord  and  TasA  Joseph,  b  Apl  10,  1783,  m  Milicent  Parker 
and  had  Sibyl,  Sophia,  Stephen,  Gaines,  Calvin,  Merrill,  Sophronia  and 
Cyrus;  fohn,  b  Nov  20,  1784,  m  Huldah  Boyden  and  had  Desire,  Dan- 
iel—m  Esther  M.  Stone  and  had  Maria,  John  Frank,  Charles,  Henry, 
Joseph,  Lewis  Foster  m  Mary  E.  Flagg,  Ira  Broad  and  Marsha— Joseph, 
John  M.,  Samuel  D.,  Amos,  Hannah,  Elnathan  and  Emerson;  Buckley, 
b  Nov  13,  1787,  m  Lois  Nye  and  had  Milly  who  m  Thomas  Leland,  and 
Stephen  who  m  (1)   Lucy  Fuller  and  (2)  Sophronia  Sawyer;  Amos,b 
July  15,  17S8,  d  1819;  Milicent, b  Nov  28,  1790,  m  John  Goulding;  Simeon, 
b  Sep  16,  1792,  m  Mrs.  Abigail  Bailey;  Hannah,  b  May  1,  1796,  m  Samuel 
Stratton;  Emerson,  b  Jan  24,  1799,  m  Lucy  Howard  and  had  Mary  Ann, 
Dolly  M.,  Emerson  M.,  Amelia,  and  Addie;  and  Attai,  b  Nov  28,  1801), 
Peter  (b  Mch  17,  1754,  d  Aug  12,  1S26,  m  Phebe  Brigham,  b  1746.  d  Feb 
15,  1810,  and  had  Peter,  b  Oct  24,   1774,  d  1852,  at  Berlin,  Vt.,  i_i   Polly 
Hubbard,  d  1855,  dau  Dea.  Elisha  and  Mercy  (Hubbard)  Hubbard  of 
Holden,  Mass.;  Attai,  b  Mch  6,  1777,  m  Mary  (Polly?)  Allen  and  had 
Charles  b  181 2  m  Fannie  A.  Small  and  had  six  children;  Hannah  b  1813 
m  Simon  Abbott  and  had  Sarah  and  Eliza;  Clarissa  b  18 15  m  Joab  S. 
Holt  and  had  seven  children;  Mary  b  1818;  Russell  b  1821 ;  and  Adeline  b 
1824  m  James  D.  Black  and  had  Eliza,  Edgar,  and  Addie;  Billa  b  Feb 
22,  17S0,  m  Betsey  Eames  of  Holliston  and  had  Mary  Ann  b  181 1,  Wil- 
liam b  1812,  Betsey  Eames  b   1S15,  Janus  b  1820,  and  Martin  b  1823; 
Jonas,  b  May  29,  1782,  m  Sarah  Wheeler  and  had  Mary  b  1807,  Caroline 
b  1809  d  y,  Russell  b  181 2,  Caroline  b  1814  m  missionary  Edward  Bailey 
and  lives  in  Sandwich  Islands,  Sarah  b  181 7  m  Wallace  Clark,  Eli  b  1819, 
m  (1)  Susan  Howard  and  (2)  Samantha  Marsh,  Martha  b  1821  m  Thomas 
Wilder,  Abraham  b  1824  m  Persis  Keyes,  and  Edward  b  1824  m  Hannah 
Gibson;  Betsey,  b  Dec   14,    1784,  m  Samuel  Woodward  Hubbard  (see 
elsewhere);  Brigham,  b  May  16,  1788,  m  Persis  Davis  of  Princeton;  and 
Joel,  b  Aug  22,  1790,  m  Betsey  Bartlett  of  Rutland,  Vt.),  Attai  (b  June 
20,  1756),  Milicent  (b  Aug  22,  1758,  d  y),  Tilly  (b  Apl  19,  1761,  m  Anne 
Joslyn,   dau   Peter   and   Elizabeth   (Greenleaf)   Joslyn  of   Leominster, 
Mass.,  and  had  Phebe,  b  Mch  23,  1785,  d  in  Chelsea,  Vt.,  1853,  m  Gen 
Benjamin  Rolfe  b  1780,  d  1835  at  Chelsea,  Vt,  and  had  eight  children, 
one  dau  Charlotte  Buckley  Rolfe,  b  1813,  marrying  Elisha  Hubbard  b 
1803,  d  1856,  at  Beloit,  Wis.;  she  is  living  in  Chicago,  111.,  and  had  Anna 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  MERRIAM 

-- 1 

P,  b  1835,  of  Minneapolis,  Minn.;  Calvin  Rolfc,  b  183S,  of  Lampasas, 
Tex.;  Franklin  Elisha,  b  1840,  of  Moran,  Tex.,  m  Rosa  L.  [ames  of 
Beloit,  Wis.,  and  had  Frank  Rolfe;  Charles  Oilman,  b  1 844,  of  San  An- 
tonio, Tex.,  m  Ella  M.  Piatt  of  Fitchburg,  Mass.,  and  had  Mabel  Char- 
lotte; and  John  Stillman,  b  1S46,  of  Chicago,  111.,  manager  Fisher's 
Patent  Medicine  Depot,  m  Anne  Yeiser  Crawford  of  San  Antonio,  Tex., 
and  had  Mary  Isabel;  Calvin,  b  Mch  22,  1787,  d  abt  1828  at  Chelsea,  Yt., 
built  first  paper  mill  in  Montpelier,  Yt.,  m  abt  1822  Dorcas  Pingree  of 
Montpelier  and  had  Calvin  Rolfe,  Abner  Pingree,  Joseph,  and  Ashley, 
second  child,  b  June  22,  1824,  m  Aug  25,  1847,  (1)  Ann  Carpenter  b  June 
21,  182S,  d  Nov  29,  1890,  of  Barre,  Yt.,  dau  Mason  Carpenter  and  had 
Flora  Ella  b  1853,  d  Jan  7,  1864;  Charles  Joseph  b  June  22,  1856,  Har- 
vard A.  B.  1883,  LL.B.  1886,  lawyer,  Kansas  City,  Mo.;  Leonora  Dor- 
cas, b  1858,  d  Dec  28,  1867;  Arthur  Ashley  b  1862.  d  Jan  9,  1864;  Julia 
May,  b  1863,  d  Jan  4,  1868;  and  Arthur  Ashley  b  Feb/  1868,  Harvard  A. 
B.  1S90.  He  then  m  (2)  Mrs.  Charlotte  Marie  (Avery)  Whitney  and  re- 
sides in  Montpelier;  Ashley,  b  Nov  17,  1788,  m  Miss  Clement 'of  Stan- 
stead,  Can.,  lived  and  d  there,  and  had  Christopher  Columbus  and  Wel- 
lington, both  removed  West;  Anne,  m Linsley,  lived  and  died 

at  London,  Ont.,  Can.;  Tilly,  b  June  28,  1796,  d  unm  at  London,  Out., 
Can.),  and  Milicent  (b  Sep  19,  1763). 

SOX   OF   THOMAS  AND   ABIGAIL   (BROWN)    HUBBARD. 

K13  THOMAS — b  in  Concord,  Mass,  Nov  14,  1767,  termed  "deacon", 
d  there  Dec  18,  1835.  Deacon  HUBBARD  was  a  good  tanner  and  a 
stirring  speaker  in  the  town  meetings.  He  hated  rum,  and  declined  to 
run  for  the  Legislature.  His  hobby  was  keeping  carefully  a  diary  and 
watching  his  barometer,  the  first  and  only  one  in  Concord  for  many 
years.  He  and  his  son  Cyrus  were  members  of  the  famous  Concord 
Social  Club,  and  Ralph  Waldo  Emerson  mentions  him  in  his  "  Essays  on 
Eloquence."  He  m  May  28,  1789  (1)  Rebecca  Wheeler  (b  1769,  d  <  >et 
26,  1S03)  mother  of  all  his  children.  He  m  June  14,  1804,  (2)  Rebecca 
Prescott  of  Concord,  who  d  Dec  4,  1S46.  Children— Rebecca  (b  Mch 
16,  1790,  m  David  Bent),  Cyrus  (b  Sep  3,  1791,  m  Sep  3,  1816,  Susan 
Hartwell,  and  had  Rebecca  b  181 7,  m  Hon  Charles  Wetherbee;  Lucy  b 
1820,  m  Benjamin  Hale;  Charles  b  1822,  m  Nancy  Wheeler  and  had 
Cyrus,  Susan,  and  Fannie;  Ellen,  b  1826,  m  Cyrus  Gale;  Lucretia* 
Goodwin,  b  in  Concord  Nov  22,  1831,  m  Apl  22,  1862,  Samuel  Wood  of 
Northborough,  Mass,  son  of  Samuel  and  Elizabeth  (Bowman)  Wood; 

*  Mrs.  Wood  possesses  a  silver  tankard  owned  by  Joseph  (1688-9)  and  Rebecca  (Bulkeley)  Hub- 
bard, bearing  (probably)  the  Berkeley  coat-of-arms.  Rebecca  Bulkeley  descended  through  Rev.  Peter 
(b  England  -Ian  31.  1582-3,  arr.  Concord.  Mass.  1635),  and  Grace  Chetwood,  Major  Peter  and  Rebcca 
Wheeler,  Capt  Joseph  and  Rebecca  (Jones-Minott)  Bulkeley. 


228  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

they  live  in  Northborough;  Susan,  b  1833,  m  James  Baird),  Jonathan 
(b  1793,  m  (1)  Abigail  Taylor  and  had  George  who  m  Louisa  Allen, 
Thomas,  Augustus  who  m  Mary  Wellington,  Ellen,  and  Eliza  who  m 
William  Leland;  m  (2)  Lydia  Dickson  and  had  Lucy  who  m  Henry  Ice- 
land), Thomas  (b  Mch  4,  1794,  m  Rebecca  Preston),  Darius  (b  Feb  26, 
1796,  m  Sarah  Rice  and  had  George  Rice  who  m  Priscilla  Rice  and  had 
George  Darius — lives  on  old  homestead  in  "  Hubbardsville,"  Concord, 
Mass — Mary,  Maria,  Sarah  d  y,  Abby,  Harriet,  Nellie,  and  Sarah), 
Phebe  (b  July  14,  1799,  m  Francis  Jarvis),  and  Lucy  (b  Nov  24,  1801,  d 
Aug  31,  1821). 

SONS  OF  NATHAN   AND   MARY    (PATTERSON)   HUBBARD. 

K13  THOMAS— b  Dec  28,  1745,  d  May  25,  1807,  m  (1)  Eliza  Conant  of 
Townsend,  Mass.,  and  had  Thomas  (b  about  1775);  he  m  (2)  Oct  1,  1777, 
Lois  White  (b  Apl  30,  1747,  d  Mch  26,  1834),  of  Lancaster,  Mass.  Chil- 
dren (by  Lois  White) — John  (b  Oct  3,  1777,  d  Nov  8,  1845,  m  Dec  4, 
1805,  Emma  Fisk  (b  May  9,  1786,  d  Aug  11,  1841)  of  Groton,  and  had 
George,  Mary,  Sarah,  and  Nathaniel  F.),  Abel  (b  Oct  5,  1779,  d  Nov  3, 
1852,  lived  in  Brookline  near  Boston,  Mass.,  m  Martha  Winchester,  b 
June  11,  1785,  d  Oct  15,  1836,  and  had  George  Dunbar  b  1810,  m  Cath- 
erine McPherson,  Martha  Ann  b  18 13,  and  William  Winchester  b  181 9, 
married  Harriet  Hoyt),  Nathan  (b  Mch  12,  1681,  d  abt  1826  in  Port- 
land, Me),  Luther  (b  Aug  13,  1782,  d  Mch  2,  1 85 7,  at  Manchester,  N.  H., 
m  Dec  18,  1806,  Hannah  Russell,  b  July  9,  1 781,  at  Westford,  Mass.,  d 
Dec  12,  1870,  and  had  Luther  Prescott* Mary  Ann,  Hannah,  Thomas, 
Thomas  Russell,  William,  and  Sarah  Elizabeth),  Jonas,  twin  (b  Dec  13, 
1783,  d  abt  1825  in  Providence,  R.  I.),  Amos  (b  Dec  13,  1783,  d  Jan  30, 
1858,  in  Amherst,  N.  H.,  m  Oct  14,  181 1,  Mary  Walton  Hartshorn,  b  at 
Amherst,  Mch  26,  1784,  d  there  July  20,  1868,  and  had  Jonas,  Amos  b 
1 81 3,  rem  Ash  ton,  111.,  Eliza  Ann  b  18 14,  Mary  Thomas,  b  1816,  m  Henry 
Sanderson,  Nancy  D.,  William  Hartshorn,  b  18 18,  m  Eliza  Russell,  Lucy 
Moore  b  1821,  m  Calvin  Dodge,  and  Sarah  Thorp  b  1823),  Hannah  (b 
Aug  28,  1785,  d  June  23,  1786),  Anna  (b  Jan  5,  1787,  m  June  4,  1807, 
Joseph  Clough),  Phinehas  (b  Mch  8,  1789,  of  Hopkinton,  Mass.,  d  Feb  10, 
1832,  m  Apl  15,  1813,  Lucinda  Nelson,  d  Mch  27,  1818,  of  Milford, 
Mass.,  and  had  Josiah  Nelson  b  1815,  m  Mary  Moffatt,  George  B.  b  1818, 
m  Diana  Rawson,  and  (?)  Henry ;  he  then  m  Mch  20,  181 9  (2)  Betsey 
Jones  and  had  Appleton  b  1819,  m  Anna  Eddy,  Eliza  Ann  b  1822,  m 
William  Wheelock,  Henry  Jones  b  1826,  m  Marietta  Warren,  and  Gilbert 
Dean  b  1831),  and  Lucy  (b  Mch  20,  1791,  d  Feb  10,  1832). 

K14  NATHAN— b  June  2,  1747,  d  at  "  Hubbard's  Hill,"  Rindge,  N.  H., 
Aug  13,  1823,  m  Sarah .     Children — Jonathan  (b  Mch  24,  1773, 

*  See  page  385  for  additional  data. 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  MERRIAM.  22g 

m  Oct  28,  1796,  Pamelia  Stone,  dau  of  Salmon  Stone,  and  rem  abt  18 18 
to  boundary  line  bet  Pa.  and  N.  Y.,  and  was  accidentally  shot  and  killed, 
leaving  Billey,  Luther,  Emerson,  Abel,  and  Columbus),  Sarah  (b  Aug- 31, 
1774,  d  Nov  1,  1776),  Abigail  (b  May  13,  1776,  d  Oct  27,  1776),  Nathan 
b  Sept  6,  1777,  d  unm  Feb  2,  1841),  Ede  (b  Aug  10,  1779,  d  unm),  Abel 
(b  Aug  3,  1781),  Susannah  (b  May  9,  1783,  m  Nathaniel  Wetherbee), 
Anna  (b  Mch  14,  1785,  d  Apl  29,  1786),  Phinehas  (b  Mch  17,  1787,  d 
unm  in  Ashby,  Mass),  Esther  (b  May  26,  1792)  and  Jackson  (b  Jan  5, 

*795), 

K15  HEZEKTAH — b  Jan  19,  1755,  d  in  Rindge,  17.  ".,  Apl  22,  1822,  m 
Rebecca  Hutchinson  (b  1762,  d  Apl  13,  1849),  ()t  Liiierica,  Mass.,  and 
settled  on  "  Hubbard's  Hill,"  Rindge,  X.  H.,  about  1783;  was  deacon 
and  highly  respected,  and  the  father  of  13  children,  all  born  in 
Rindge.  Children — Benjamin  (b  about  1780,  d  June  9,  1841,  m  Apl  3, 
1S11,  Dorcas  White  (d  1856),  dau  Nathan  White  of  Cambridge,  Mass.; 
he  lived  in  Rindge  and  had  Elizabeth,  Ire  tie  A.,  Albert  Granville,  and 
Joel),  Levi  (b  June  27,  1784,  d  July  28,  1862,  m  Nov  29,  1814,  Betsy 
Smith  (d  Mch  8,  1S61),  dau  Joseph  Smith,  and  had  Joseph  and  Mary 
Jane),  Rebecca  (b  Feb  29,  17S8,  d  July  8,  1865,  m  May  31,  1814,  Ben- 
jamin May  of  Winchendon,  Mass),  Sally  (b  Feb  17,  1790,  m  (1)  Leonard 
Rand  (2)  Capt  Daniel  Norcross),  Polly  (b  Sep  29,  1791,  d  unm  Jan  1, 
l855),  Rodney  (bjuly  3,  1793,  d  unm),  Harry  (b  July  8,  1795,  in  Rindge, 
din  Shrewsbury,  Mass.,  m  June  8,  1823,  (1)  Clarissa  Fay  and  Dec  6, 
1832,  (2)  Dorcas  Whitney,  and  had  by  Clarissa  Henry  B.  and  Applet  on 
BurnJiam — see  Descent  Line  Harry  Hubbard,  N.  Y.  City),  Hezekiah 
(b  Apl  25,  1797),  Mersylyia  (b  July  7,  1799,  d  unm  in  Rindge  Nov  13, 
1894),  Eliphalet  (b  July  10,  1S01,  d  Aug  30,  1866,  m  Feb  1,  1827,  Betsy 
Sawtelle,  and  had  Eliphalet,  Hezekiah,  Rodney,  George,  Otis,  Timothy 
E.  and  Sarah  Rebecca),  Otis  (b  Oct  18,  1803,  d  in  Rindge  Nov  27,  1894, 
he  and  his  sister  Mersylvia,  whose  death  preceded  his  by  two  weeks, 
were  the  last  of  the  13  children,  reaching  the  ripe  age  of  91  and  95;  they 
left  handsome  legacies  to  the  churches  of  Rindge  and  various  mission- 
ary societies),  John  Hutchinson  (b  Dec  4,  1S05),  and  Addison  (b  abt 
1807,  m  May  10,  1838,  Lucy  Norcross). 

SONS    OF    SAMUEL    AND    EUNICE    (WOODWARD)    HUBBARD. 

K1C  SAMUEL — b  1 741,  d  June  24,  1823,  m  Lucy  Wheeler,  b  1735,  d  June 
14,  1808.  They  lived  in  Holden.  Children— Samuel  (b  1761,  m  Sarah 
Davis),  Daniel  (b  1762,  m  Dorothy  Brown),  Jonas  (b  1764,  m  Matilda 
Childs  and  had  Daniel,  b  1790,  m  Sarah  Marshall  and  had  Daniel,  Jonas, 
William,  Willard,  Lucy,  Agnes,  and  Sarah;  Martha,  b  1792,  m  Silas 
Watkins;  and  Lucy,  b  1794,  m  Levi  Smith),  Simeon  (b  1769,  m  Bertha 


2,Q  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Coleman),  Willard  (b  1771,  m  Lucy  Bigelow),  Lucy  (b  1779,  m  John 
Howe),  and  Eunice  (b  1781,  m  Edmund  Davis). 

K17  ELISHA — b  in  Holden,  Mass,  in  1744,  d  there  July  17,  1S14,  deacon, 
and  lieutenant  in  Rev.  War,  m  Dec  3,  1767,  Mercy  Hubbard  (b  1747,  d 
Apl  21,  1825),  dau  John  andAzubah  (Moore)  Hubbard;  lived  in  Holden. 
Children — John  (b  in  Holden,  Mass,  Aug  24,  1768,  d  in  Windsor,  Mass, 
Nov  22,  1849,  farmer,  m  1790  Lydia  Raymond  dau  William  Raymond, 
lived  in  Hinsdale,  Mass,  and  had  Betsey,  b  1791,  m  Samuel  Abbott \John, 
b  1795,  m  Miranda  Watkins,  lived  in  Tioga  Co,  N.  Y.;  Lydia,  b  1798,  m 
Orange  Sweet;  Noms,  b  1802,  m  Prudence  Wood,  lived  in  Ohio;  Ed- 
mund, b  1804,  m  Sarah  Minor,  lived  in  Windsor,  Mass;  Per  sis,  b  1S06,  m 
Edward  Brown;  and  Eli  Andrews,  b  Dec  11,  1S14,  at  Hinsdale,  Mass,  m 
Aug  19,  1844,  Fannie  Daniels  dau  Robert  Daniels  of  Worthington, 
Mass,  lived  awhile  in  Springfield,  Mass,  teacher,  legislator,  prest.  elec- 
tor, and  supt.  schools),  Sarah  (b  1 77 1,  m  Ethan  Davis),  Mary  (b  1773, 
m  Peter  Hubbard,  son  Peter  and  Phebe  (Brigham)  Hubbard),  Azubah 
(b  1776,  m  Moses  Holt),  Eli  (b  1779,  m  Mehitable  Haskell,  lived  in 
Holden,  and  had  Hiram  b  1810;  Davis  b  1S12;  Sarah  El.  b  1814  m  Mar- 
cus Hobbs;  and  Lucy  b  1818  m  Asa  Keyes),  Benjamin  (b  1781,  d  Feb 
23,  1836,  m  Martha  Walker  and  had  Levi  b  1803  m  Larette  Haskell  and 
had  Harvey  and  Benjamin;  Warren  b  1S04  m  Lucy  Joslyn  and  had 
Mary  b  1831,  Augusta  b  1833,  and  Sarah  b  1841  m  Charles  Willard; 
Simeon  b  1806,  m  Caroline  Bennett;  Lucy  b  18 10,  m  Samuel  Brooks; 
Alona  b  1S13,  m  William  Rogers;  Pcrsish  1815,  m  Silas  Howe;  Benjamin 
b  18 1 7  (physician,  Plymouth,  Mass),  m  Ellen  Perry  and  had  Geraldine 
b  1846,  Lyndon  b  1850,  and  Helen  b  1853;  and  Eli  b  1820,  m  Sarah  Wat- 
son and  had  Henry  b  1846,  George  b  1848,  Helen  b  1849,  Arthur  b  185 1, 
Sarah  b  1853,  Frank  b  1856,  Charles  b  1858,  Mary  b  1863,  and  Frederick 
b  1870),  K19  Samuel  Woodward  (see  elsewhere),  Elizabeth  (b  1786,  d 
Sep  5,  1787),  and  Silas  Moore  (b  1788,  m  (1)  Abigail  Allen  and  (2) 
Eunice  Wheeler  and  had  (probably  by  Abigail  Allen)  Elis/ia  b  1S14,  m 
Caroline  Coolidge;  Harriet  b  1816,  m  Harding  Hunt;  Dorinda  b  1S18,  m 
John  Cowdin;  Sarah  b  1820,  m  John  Fay;  and  Cyrus  b  1823,  m  Elizabeth 
Rice). 

K18ABEL — born  in  Putney,  Vt.,  in  1751,  married  Lucy  Taintor  of 
Putney.  Children — Lucy  (b  1786,  m  Timothy  Woodward  and  had 
Cyrus,  George,  Lucy,  Lura,  Harriet,  and  Clark),  Abel  (b  Feb  1,  1788,  at 
Putney,  Vt.,  rem  to  Malone,  N.  Y.,  in  1839,  and  there  purchased  a  farm, 
where  he  died  Feb  26,  1853.  He  married  Sophia  Miller,  b  at  Westmin- 
ster, Vt.,  Oct  15,  1796,  d  at  Muscatine,  Iowa,  June  22,  1892,  and  had 
Eliza,  b  in  Putney  Dec  26,  1818,  d  at  Malone,  m  Noah  P.  Sabin  of  Malone 
and  had  Elizabeth  M.,  Charles  H.,  Mary  Eliza,  Emma  A.,  and  Alice  M.; 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  MERRIAM.  231 

Rufiis,  b  at  Putney  1820,  d  there  Aug  18,  1824;  Clark  M.,  b  1823,  at 
Putney,  d  there  June  4,  1836;  Charles  Leroy,  b  in  Putney  July  31,  1825, 
rem  to  Malone  (merchant)  where  he  m  Sep  30,  1852,  Eunice  E.  Watkins, 
b  Jan  12,  1829,  d  May  24,  1S94,  dauCephos  and  Phebe  Watkins,  and  had 
Leroy  Watkins,  b  Jan  22,  1857,  in  Malone,  grad.  Brooklyn  Polytechnic 
Institute  1S75,  Amherst  1879,  Univ.  Med.  Coll.  1883,  practicing-  medi- 
cine in  N.  Y.  City,  m  Nov  10,  1S92,  Fannie  Louise  Curtis  of  New  York, 
dau  Charles  and  Lizzie  A.  (Tyler)  Curtis;  Louis  Yaughan,  b  Oct  26, 
1865,  Amherst  18S7,  employed  in  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  in  manfg.  establish- 
ment; and  Charles  Allen,  b  Jan,  1869,  d  Aug  20,  1869;  Cornelia  Under- 
wood, b  1827,  d  July  8,  1834;  Mary  Sophia,  b  Jan  21,  1830,  m  William  M. 
Shaw,  of  Malone,  rem  to  Muscatine,  Iowa,  d  there,  and  had  William 
Hubbard,  Ella  Louise,  and  Emma  S.;  George  Washington,  b  Feb  18, 
1832,  rem  in  18S8  to  Tustin  City,  Cal.,  fruit  raiser  and  hop  buyer,  m  Jan 
22,  1857,  Marcia  Wood  of  Malone,  dau  Nathaniel  and  Laura  Wood,  and 
had  Clinton  S.,  b  1859,  in  Malone,  m  Jane  Banning  of  Phila.,  Pa.,  and 
had  Edith,  George,  and  Ernest;  and  Emma, bin  Malone  abt  i860,  d  Apl, 
1894,  m  Willard  Day,  d  Mch,  1891,  of  Tustin  City,  Cal.,  son  of  Andrew 
Day;  Sarah  Frances,  b  in  Putney,  Feb  5,  1835,  m  Oct  21,  1863,  at  Chi- 
cago, 111.,  Henry  Hoover,  d  Feb  27,  1S82,  of  Muscatine,  Iowa,  and  had 
Edgar  Malone,  Mary  Bertha,  Edith  Blanche,  Raymond  Sabin,  and  Alden 
Robbins;  and  Henry  Clark,  b  Aug  26,  1837,  d  Jan  2,  1863),  Sarah  (b 
1790,  m  Joseph  Underwood,  and  had  Cornelia  and  Mary  Ann),  Nancy 
(b  1799,  m  Preston  Taft  and  had  Charles  P.,  Harriet,  Mary  E.,  and 
Nancy  H.);  Philf.tta  (b  1799,  m  (1)  Alvan  Hall  and  had  Mary  E.,  m 
(2)  Solon  Stone  and  had  James),  and  Patty  (b  1802,  m  David  Wilkinson 
and  had  Warren  H .,  Solon  S.,  and  Cyrus). 

SON   OF  ELISHA   AND   MERCY  (HUBBARD)   HUBBARD. 

K19  SAMUEL  WOODWARD— b  1783  in  Holden,  d  there  Dec  7,  1850, 
m  (1)  Betsey  Hubbard  (b  1754,  d  Apl  13,  1840),  (2)  Mrs.  Mahala  Wheaton 
(d  Sep  6,  1846),  of  Barre,  Yt,  and  (3)  Mrs  Lucy  (Moulton)  Whittemore 
of  Hubbardston,  Mass.  Children  (by  Betsey  Hubbard) — Stillman  (b 
1808,  d  Apl,  1866,  m  (1)  Hannah  Mosher,  (2)  Susan  Rogers),  Phebe  (b 
Nov  2,  1810,  d  Jan  24,  1S90,  m  Alfred  P.  Bartlett),  Samuel  Brigham 
(see  Descent  Line  Ervin  Samuel  Hubbard),  Nancy  Fiske  (b  June  13, 
1815,  in  Holden,  d  there  Jan  12,  1883,  m  Dec  28,  1841,  George  Shipley 
Lakin  (d  Jan  24,  1875)  of  Paxton;  rem  to  Holden  in  April,  1864;  they 
had  Marion  Elizabeth  (b  June  27,  1S45,  m  May  13,  1869,  Samuel  War- 
ren, b  in  Auburn,  Mass,  Oct  15,  1834;  live  in  Holden  and  have  Herbert 
Lakin,  Arthur  Kirke,  and  George  Waterman  Warren)  and  Samuel  Her- 
bert (b  July  27,  1848,  d  Apl  25,  1863)  and  Edwin  (b  1S24?  d  y). 


212 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


SONS  OF  DANIEL  AND  ESTHER  (RICE)   HUBBARD. 

L8  SAMUEL— b  Apl  9,  1697,  m  Hannah  Bliss  of  Brimfield.  Children 
— (Copied  from  Douglas  Hubbard's  "  Tree  ") — Samuel  (b  1726),  Han- 
nah (b  1727),  Martha  (b  1729),  Mary  (b  1730),  John  (b  1732),  Jonathan 
(b  1733,  m  Mary  Keep  of  Brimfield  and  had  Batlishcba  b  1762,  Samuel 'b 
1764,  Solomon  b  1766,  John  b  1768,  Mary  b  1770,  Martha  b  1772,  and 
Jonathan  b  1774),  Simeon  (b  1735,  d.  1x778,  m  Lydia  Blodgett  of  Brim- 
field and  had  Louisa  b  1763;  Thomas  b  1766;  Simeon  b  1770,  d  1850,  m 
Cloe  Goodall  and  had  George,  Mary,  Philip,  Cloe,  Louisa,  Newton,  and 
John;  Lydiah  xyj^Lucy  b  1779;  Hannah  b  1782;  and  Sarahb  1786),  and 

Thomas  (b  1737,  lived  in  Brimfield,  m ,  and  had   Thomas  who  m 

Mary  Collister  of  Brimfield  and  had  Samuel  b  1791;  Orra  b  1794,  m  Ira 
Brown;  Mary  b  1796,  m  George  Taylor;  Elizabeth  b  1798,  m  John  Col- 
lister; Thomas  b  1802,  m  Caroline  Homer  of  Chicago;  Lucy  b  1806,  m 
Noah  Hitchcock;  Lydia  b  1806,  m  Ethan  Keep;  William  b  1808;  and 
Joseph  b  18 11). 

L3  EDMUND— b  in  Hatfield  July  18,  1700,  d  there  Apl  27,  1766,  m 
Ruth  Lyman  (d  Nov  25,  1775).  Children — Anna  (b  July  4,  1729,  dunm 
Feb  1,  1764),  Ruth  (b  Aug  1,  1732,  m  May  4,  1758,  James  (Samuel?) 
Meacham),  L4  Edmund  (see  elsewhere),  Mabel  (b  Mch  17,  1737,  d  May 
3,  1816,  m  Jan  31,  1760,  Hezekiah  Hubbard),  Esther  (b  Mch  22,  1738,  m 
Oct  14,  1773,  Peter  Strong),  Moses  (b  May  30,  1740,  d  Jan  17,  1742)  and 
Moses  (b  1742,  d  May  1822,  m  Oct  28,  1779,  Mabel  Hopkins,  b  1748,  d 
Apl  19,  1829:  Rev.,  Yale  1765;  lived  in  Hatfield  and  Brookfield,  Vt,  and 
had  L5  Roswcll  (see  elsewhere),  Moses  b  Mch  11,  1782,  d  in  Brookfield  in 
1825;  Mehitable  b  May  7,  1784,  d  1828,  m  John  Chamberlin;  Cynthia  b 
Mch  31,  1786,  m  David  Waters;  Sarah  P,  b  Feb  27,  17S6,  d  ijg^;Jer?/sha 
b  Mch  22,  1790,  m  William  Meacham;  Lazureuee  b  Mch  14,  1792,  d  1812, 
m  Mary  Watrous  of  Windsor,  (Vt.  ?);  John  b  Nov  24,  1793,  d  in  1825,  m 
Hannah  Stickney,  lived  in  Worcester,  Mass,  and  had  Samuel,  Julius,  and 
Harriet;  Sophia  b  Nov  22,  1795,  m  Charles  Edgerton;  and  Elmira  b 
Apl  19,  1799,  d  1S11). 

SON  OF  EDMUND  AND  RUTH  (LYMAN)  HUBBARD. 

L4  EDMUND— b  Feb  11,  1734,  d  May,  i79i,m  Dec  17,  1761,  Margaret 
Gaylord,  b  1740,  d  Dec  9,  1825.  Children — Lucy  (b  Feb  24,  1764,  d  Jan 
23,  1848,  m  Oct  26,  1786,  Samuel  Porter,  in  Shepards  Battalion  in  Shay's 
Rebellion),  Daniel  (b  Feb  19,  1766,  d  Nov  12,  1775),  Elisha  (b  June  6, 
1768,  d  in  Hadley,  Mass,  Feb  24,  1827,  m  Feb  9,  1797,  Lucinda  Noble,  b 
Jan  27,  1774,  d  Oct  29,  1857,  of  Westfield,  R.  I.,  and  had  Maria  b  1798; 
Harriet,  b  1799;  Margaret,  b  1801,  m  Seth  Barton;  Lucinda,  b  1804,  m 
Lyman  Libby;  Elizabeth,  b  1807,  m  Erastus  Hall;  Eunice  Noble,  h  1809, 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  MERRIAM.  233 

m  Theodore  Bartlett;  and  Susan,  b  1810,  m  Erastus  Nash),  Samuel  (b 
Aug  iS,  1770,  d  Nov  12,  1775),  Susanna  (b  Aug  17,  1772),  Elizabeth  (b 
Sep  1,  1774,  m  Elihu  Smith),  Daniel  (b  1776,  rem  to  Brunswick,  N.  Y., 

m ,   and  had  Edward,  Daniel,  Josiali,  Joseph,  Daniel,  and  four 

daughters),  Edmund  (b  Mch  8,  1779,  lived  in  Worthington,  Mass,  d  Apl 
25>  l855>  m  Chester,  Mass,  the  pioneer  tanner  of  the  town,  m  in  New- 
York  May  23,  1803,  (1)  Charlotte  Bailey  of  Cummington,  Mass,  and  had 
LG  Edmund  (see  elsewhere);  m  (2)  Mary  Colwell  and  had  Alary  b  in 
Worthington,  July  1,  181 7;  and  ElisJia,  b  in  Chester  abt  181 9;  m  (3) 
Arabella  Cogswell  of  Albany,  N.  Y.,  and  had  Margaret,  b  in  Chester  in 
July,  1830),  William  (b  Mch  6,  1781,  d  Dec  30,  1846,  m  (1)  Mercy  Hol- 
brook,  (2)  Sarah  Holbrook,  lived  in  Cummington,  and  had  Laura,  b 
1806,  m  Jonathan  Day;  William,  b  1808,  m  (1)  Laura  Mitchell,  rem  to 
Grand  Rapids,  Mich,  also  Saranac,  Mich,  m  (2)  Ozanca  Cornwall  and 
had  Ozias,  Emma,  Daniel,  Louisa,  Amelia,  Elmira,  William  and  Aldis; 
Porter,  lived  in  Oswego,  N.  Y.;  Edwin,  lived  in  Adrian,  Mich;  Samuel,  b 
181 2,  m  Yenetta  Mitchell,  lived  in  Oswego,  N.  Y.,  and  had  Charles, 
Marv,  Lucius  and  Nellie;  Francis,  b  1814;  Andalusia,  b  1815,  m  Newrell 
Mitchell;  Sandford,  b  18 17,  lived  in  Northampton,  Mass;  and  Cornelia, 
b  1819),  and  David  (b  Dec  25,  1788,  d  1802). 

SON   OF  MOSES  AND  MABEL   (HOPKINS)   HUBBARD. 

L5  ROSWELL — b  Sep  n,  1780,  d  in  1854,  lived  in  Northampton, 
Mass,  m  (1)  Sarah  Mitchell,  (2)  Roxanna  Hunt.  Children — Cornelia 
(b  1807,  m  (1)  John  Wells,  (2)  Charles  Hitchcock),  Fordyce  Mitchell 
(see  Prominent  American  Hubbards),  Louis  (b  181 1,  m  Lucy  Gaylord), 
Marshall  (b  1S13,  m  Ruth  Allen),  Elmira  (b  1816),  Elizabeth  (b  1818, 
m  William  Greenly),  Henry  (b  182 1,  m  Julia  Palmer),  Sarah  (b  1823, 
m  David  Dennis),  John  (b  1827,  m  Susan  Breck),  Emily  (b  1837,  m 
Charles  Herrick),  Anna  (b  1842),  and  Helen  (b  1846). 

SON    OF    EDMUND    AND    CHARLOTTE    (BAILEY)    HUBBARD. 

1.6  EDMUND— b  in  Worthington,  Mass.,  July  25,  1804,  d  in  Pittsfield, 
Mass.,  Feb  15,  1893,  m  at  Becket,  Mass.,  July  29,  1826,  Caroline  Blair,  d 
1883,  eldest  daughter  of  Caleb  and  Emblem  (Perkins)  Blair.  He  at- 
tended school  in  Old  Hadley  at  Hopkins  Academy,  and  was,  after  gradua- 
tion, a  teacher  for  a  few  months;  also  engaged  in  the  tanning  business 
and  was  known  as  an  upright  man  of  business  affairs.  Children  (b 
in  Chester,  Mass.) — Charlotte  Bailey  (b  Feb  22,  1828,  m  Washington 
Root),  Casmelia  Shepherd  (b  Sep  3,  1830,  m  John  M.  Brewster  of  Pitts- 
field,  Mass.),  Edmund  (b  May  2,  1832,  rem  to  Connecticut),  Dwight  (b 
June  29,  1834,  Williams  Coll   1855,  lived  in  Pittsfield),  Josiah  Mills  (b 


234  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Aug  12,  1836,  of  Waterbury,  Ct.),  and  Elisha  Blair  (b  Dec  28,  1842, 
druggist  in  Tiffin,  Ohio;  Ohio  Legislature  1885-87;  member  American 
Institute  of  Civics  N.  Y.  City,  Sons  American  Revolution,  Ohio  State 
Board  Commerce  and  Connecticut  Valley  Commandery,  K.  T.,  of 
Greenfield,  Mass.;  m  Aug  27,  1873,  Helen  Mary  Sawyer,  eldest  daughter 
Judge  George  Yeaton  Sawyer  and  Emeline  (Tucker)  Sawyer  of  Nashua, 
N.  H.,  and  had  Clara  Sawyer,  Sheldon  Blair,  and  Helen  C lenience. 

SONS    OF    ISAAC    AND    ANNE    (WARNER)    HUBBARD. 

IVI"'  JOHN— b  Apl  20,  1693,  probably  in  Hatfield,  d  Aug  25,  1778,  m 
Hannah  Cowles  of  East  Hartford,  Ct.,  b  1693,  d  Feb  19,  1777,  at  Hat- 
field, dau  Timothy  and  Hannah  (Pitkin)  Cowles  of  East  Hartford. 
Children — Mary  (b  July  28,  17 19,  m  Capt  Joseph  Warner,  b  Jan  11, 
1 7 10,  of  Hardwick,  Mass.,  son  of  Daniel  and  Mary  (Hubbard)  Warner, 
and  had  A  nna,  who  m  James  Paige*;  Elisha  (b  Sep  4,  i72i,dApl  11,  1768, 
in  Hatfield,  Mass,  where  he  started  "Hubbard's  Inn," a  famous  Rev. War 
resort,  m  June  7,  1748,  Lucy  Stearns  (b  Oct  6,  1727),  dau  Thomas  Stearns 
of  Worcester,  and  had  Hannah  b  Feb  2,  1750,  d  Feb  17,  1786,  m  Aug  2, 
1770,  Simeon  White  Jr,  b  1745,  in  Hatfield,  d  Aug  20,  1820,  in  Rutland, 
N.  Y.;  Elislia  b  Nov  12,  175 1,  d  y;  Lncy  b  Sep  26,  1753,  m  Gershom 
Clarke  Lyman;  Anna  b  Dec  26,  1755,  d  June  21,  1839,  m  Nov  27,  1799, 
(1)  Josiah  Allis,  d  Apl  17,  1804;  she  then  m  (2)  Salmon  White  Jr, 
b  in  Whately  Sep  22,  1760,  d  there  May  1,  1822;  Elisha  b  Sep  13,  1758, 
d  May  17,  1843,  at  Williamsburg,  Mass.,  innkeeper  and  town  clerk,  m 
June  22,  1780,  Hannah  White,  b  June  8,  1759,  d  Mch  27,  1824,  in  Hat- 
field, dau  Daniel  and  Submit  (Morton)  White,  and  had  Lucinda  b  1780, 
Sally  b  1781,  d  y,  Jeremiah  b  1783,  d  y,  Jeremiah,  b  1786,  m  Huldah 
Nash,  Elisha,  b  1789,  Col.  War  18 12,  Lucretia  b  1790,  m  Wallace  Price, 
Erastus  b  1792,  m  Amanda  Mayhew,  Sally  b  1792,  m  Moses  Parker, 
Hannah  b  1794,  d  y;  and  Hannah  b  1800;  Lucretia  b  Sep  23,  1760,  m  Gen. 
Epaphroditus  Champion  of  Haddam;  Sarah  b  1762;  and  John  b  1765, 
d  in  Hatfield  1804,  m  Ruth  Dickinson  and  had  Henry  who  m  Mercy 
Warner;  Stearns  who  m  Electa  White;  Roswell  who  m  Mehitable 
Nash;  Louisa  b  abt  1796;  Elijah  who  m  Julia  White;  and  John,  b  abt 
1800,  who  m  Clarissa  Knapp  and  had  Silas  Graves  (see  Prominent  Ameri- 
can Hubbards),  Edwin,  Elizabeth,  Mary,  Roswell,  Louisa  and  Henry), 
Hannah  (b  Mch  28,  1724,  d  Mch  20,  1727),  and  John  (b  Nov  6,  1726,  d 
Nov  28,  1794,  "greatly  lamented,"  Yale  1747,  settled  May  30,  1750,  as 
a  Baptist  minister  in  Northfield,  Mass.,  and  preached  there  45  years. 
Though   a  staunch   patriot  he  continued  to  pray  for  the  "  health  and 

*  See  History  of  Hardwick,  Mass.,  pp  438  and  524  for  accounts  of  James  Paige  and  Capt  Joseph 
Warner. 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  MERRIAM 

wealth"  of  King  George  until  he  retired  from  the  ministry  in  1784. 
Hem  Dec  26,  1753,  Anne  Hunt,  and  had  Erastus  b  1761,  of  Vernon 
and  Sullivan,  Vt,  who  had  Erastus,  who  had  "Walter  E.,  d  v;  Ellsworth,  1) 
1766,  d  y;  Anneb  1769,  m  Rev  John  Wells  of  Hartford,  Ct;  Ellsworth  b 
1776;  Electa  b  1771;  Arad  b  1790;  Roswell  b  Nov  15,  1756,  d  Mch  6, 
1816,  m  Elizabeth  Church,  lived  in  Sullivan,  N.  H.,  and  had  Roswell, 
Fanny,  Eliza,  Ellsworth,  George,  Hezro,  and  Mary  Ann;  Samuel  b  in 
Xorthfield,  Mass.,  in  Sep,  1763,  d  in  Franklin,  Vt.,  Apl  9,  1S44,  m  in  Jan, 
1790,  Elizabeth  Swan,  who  d  July  28,  1S40  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line 
Rev.  Thomas  Swan  Hubbard  for  his  ten  children),  and  John  bapt  in 
Northfield,  Mass.,  Oct  13,  1764,  m  about  1776  Prudence  Stevens  (b  Nov  6, 
1750),  dau  Phinehas  Stevens.  Hon.  John  was  an  early  settler  in  Charles- 
town,  N.  H.,  a  prosperous  merchant  and  highly  esteemed  public  official. 
(See  Abridged  Descent  Line  Richard  Henry  Sylvester,  also  Biog.  Gov. 
Henry  Hubbard  under  Prominent  American  Hubbards). 

|V|J  ISAAC — b  Jan  14,  1695,  d  in  1763,  m  July  4,  1723,  (1)  Christine 
Gunn,  dau  Samuel  and  Elizabeth  (Wyatt)  Gunn  of  Hatfield  and 
Sunderland,  (2)  widow  Abigail  (Kellogg)  Atherton,  dau  John  Kellogg. 
Children  (by  Christine  Gunn)  Ms  Israel  (see  elsewhere) — Hannah  (b 
July  11,  1727,111  1745  (1)  Simeon  Graves,  (2)  Absalom  Scott),  Elijah  (b 
Dec  16,  1731),  Christine  (b  Dec  17,  1733,  m  (1)  Ebenezer  Field,  (2)  Paul 
Field  of  Northfield,  Mass),  Anna  (b  Mch  8,  1739,  m  Ezekiel  Wood- 
bury), Isaac  (b  Jan  6,  1730,  d  1S10,  in  Wilmington,  Vt.,  m  Submit 
Graves  of  Sunderland  and  had  Lucy  b  1758,  d  Mch  19,  1793,  m  Simeon 
Clark;  Irene,  h  May,  1763,  d  Aug  6,  1831,  m  Nov  23,  1786,  (1)  Asahel 
Clark,  in  180S  (2)  William  Boltwood;  Elijah,  b  Sep,  1767,  d  in  Amherst 
Mch  24,  1814,  m  Feb  15,  1795,  Abigail  Lewis;  Elihu,  b  Mch  24,  1754,  d 
in  Goshen,  Mass.,  m  Sarah  Smith  of  Leverett  and  had  Elihu,  b  1782; 
Christine,  b  1786;  Sarah,  b  1788;  Mary,  b  1790;  and  Spencer,  b  1784,  m 
Sarah  Gunn  of  Deerfield  and  had  Sarah  whom  John  Mann,  Harriet  who 
m  Thomas  Bridges,  Elihu  who  went  to  Hartford,  Lucius  b  abt  1816, 
Philena  who  m  Wilder  Payne,  and  Cora  b  abt  1819;  Stephen,  b  July  27, 
1756,  d  Dec,  1828,  m  Feb  10,  178c,  Lucy  Boltwood  of  Amherst,  rem  to 
Wilmington,  Vt.,  and  had  Isaac  b  abt  1782,  rem  to  Herkimer  County, 
N.  Y.;  Sylvester,  b  abt  17 84,  d  1819,  rem  to  Boston;  Clarissa,  b  abt 
1786;  vSarah,  b  abt  1790;  Amanda,  b  abt  1792,  mDanforth  Clark;  Henry, 
b  abt  1796,  rem  to  Herkimer  County,  N.  Y.;  and  Stephen,  b  abt  1783, 
lived  in  Wilmington,  m  Abigail  Smith  and  had  Frances,  b  abt  1806,  Lucy, 
b  abt  1808,  Mary  who  m  Newton  Morgan,  Abigail  b  abt  1S10,  Edwin,  b 
abt  1816,  m  Hannah  Young,  lived  in  Green  Tree,  N.  J.,  and  had  4  chil- 
dren, Thankful  b  abt  1818,  m  George  WThitcomb,  Stephen  b  abt  1822,  and 
Sylvester,  b  abt  181 2,  m  Marian  Swain  of  Brooklyn,    N.  Y.,  and  had 


0 


6  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Helen,  Frances,  Charles,  William  and  Abby;  and  Chester  bapt  Mch  14, 
1770,  lived  in  Wilmington,  Vt,  m  Dorothy  Kellogg  and  had  Chester,  b 
1800,  m  Amanda  Wood;  Harriet  b  1802,  m  John  Randolph;  Bela,  b 
1803'  d  1863,  m  Susan  Hindley,  lived  in  Brattleboro,  Vt.,  and  had  Sarah, 
Martin,  George  and  Jane;  Roxabella,  b  1805;  Horace,  b  1808,  m  Mary 
Rennard;  Frederick,  b  1811,  m  Arabella  Morgan,  lived  in  Halifax,  Vt., 
and  had  Emily,  Oscar  and  Henrietta;  and  George,  b  abt  1815,  lived  in 
Wilmington,  m  Salome  Green  and  had  Elizabeth  who  m  Orson  Cope- 
land,  Linus  who  m  Helen  Stannard;  Clara  who  m  Andrew  Barker,  Por- 
ter who  m  Isabelle  Simonds,  Frederick  who  m  Agnes  Walcott,  and 
Chester  who  m  Mary  Simonds)  and  M9  Giles  (see  elsewhere). 

M4  DANIEL— b  Apl  30,  1699,  d  May  30,  1779,  m  Mary  Gunn,  dau 
Samuel  Gunn  of  Hatfield  and  Sunderland.  Children— Mary  (b  1734,  d 
y),  Martha  (b  1739,  d  y),  Martha  (b  1739,  m  Timothy  Parsons),  and 
Daniel  (b  1736,  m  Mary  Gunn  of  Sunderland  and  had  Luanda  b  1759, 
m  Jeremiah  Graves;  Lemuel  b  176x5  Moses  b  1765;  Spencer  b  1768,  m 
Mary  Root  and  had  Kelita  b  1793,  and  Justin  b  1791  who  m  Mary 
Cooley  and  had  Mary  and  Emeline;  Mary  b  1772;  and  Salmon  b  1774, 
m  Caroline  Pratt  of  Westminster,  Vt). 

M5  JONATHAN— b  in  Sunderland,  Mass.,  Dec  29,  1703,  d  in  Sheffield, 
Mass.,  July  6,  1765,  m  (intentions  of  marriage  published  May  2,  1740), 
Rachel  Ely  (b  at  West  Springfield,  Mass.,  Nov  11,  1716,  d  at  Sheffield 
Mch  28,  1796),  dau  Deacon  John  and  Mercy  (Bliss)  Ely;  Yale  1724,  1st 
pastor  of  Sheffield  church  Oct  22,  1735,  dismissed  1764.  Children— (all 
born  and  died  in  Sheffield)— John  (b  1741,  d  1741),  John  (b  Aug  5,  1742, 
d  Aug  18,  1796,  m  Sarah  Chipman  and  had  John  b  1781,  m  1809  Mary 
Ann  Cowles  and  rem  to  Madison,  Ohio,  and  had  Mary  Ann  and  Caro- 
line; Henry  b  May  22,  17S3,  d  in  Pittsfield,  Mass.,  Dec  25,  1863— (Wil- 
liams Coll.  1803),  lawyer,  legislator— m  Sophia  Whitney,  dau  Timothy 
and  Sophia  (Baker)  Whitney,  b  in  Lanesborough,  Mass.,  Feb  27,  1796,  d 
in  Pittsfield  Sep  10,  1863,  leaving  Henry,  Douglas  (see  Hubbard  Gene- 
alogists), John,  Sophia,  Elizabeth,  Frederick,  and  Francis;  Sarahh  1785, 
m  John  W.  Hulbert  and  rem  to  Auburn,  N.  Y.;  and  William  b  1787, 
rem  to  Chicago,  d  there  unm  1846),  Jonathan  (b  June  25,  1744,  d  Jan  1, 

1825,  m   (1)    Christia  (?) (other   authorities   give  instead  Anne 

Dean)  and  had  Rachel b  May  12,  1771,  m Chapin  of  Nunda,  N. 

Y.;  Pamclia  b  Jan  iS,  1773,  m  Samuel  Shears  of  Sheffield;  Lucretiab 

Dec   19,   1774,  m Bushnell;    Betsy   Olive,  twin    b  Feb  5,  1777; 

Jonathan  Ely,  b  Feb  5,  1777,  d  1847,  rem  to  Conneautville,  Pa.,  m  Hep- 
zibah  Atkins,  and  had  Elizabeth,  b  1S01,  m  Albert  Shears;  Horace,  b 
1803,  m  Elvira  Taylor;  Marshall,  b  1805;  Caroline,  b  1809,  m  George 
Gates;  Julia,  b  1810,  m Powers,  Charlotte,  b  1814,  m Dunn; 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  MERRIAM.  23? 

Anna,  b  1818,  m  Coughlin;  John,  b   1822,  m  Emeline  Cooper; 

Harry,  b  1823,  m  Esther  Palmer;  John  b  Mch  7,  1779;  and  Elijah  b  Feb 
3,  1783,  m  Prudence  Savage  and  had  Caroline,  Luther,  and  Luoinda; 
Jonathan  m  (2)  Lucretia  Pixley  and  had  Samuel  b  Apl  28,  1 785,  m  Anne 
Churchill  and  had  George  who  m  Sarah  Stearns  and  Albert  who  m  Sarah 
Dewey;  Anna  b  Aug  23,  1788,  d  Nov  9,  1789;  Anna  b  Aug  4,  1792,  d 
Mch  12,  1883,  m  Moses  Churchill,  son  of  Samuel  Churchill  of  Sheffield), 
Aaron  (twin,  b  Jan  5,  1747,  d  Mch  7,  1785),  Moses  (b  Jan  5,  1747,  d  Mch 
27,  1830,  m  1777  (1)  Abigail  Sheldon  and  in  1798  (2)  Lucy  Williams  (b 
Aug  27,  1763,  d  1823)  of  Hillsdale,  N.  Y.,  and  had  Polly,  b  June  30, 1778, 
d  y;  Hannah,  b  Dec  25,  1779,  d  y;  Elisha,  b  May  12,  1781,  1835,  m 
Joanna  Dibble  and  had  Henry;  Aaron,  b  Aug  22,  1784,  went  to  Va.; 
Moses  Williams,  b  Feb  3,  1797,  d  Feb  8,  1859;  and  Nancy,  b  Nov  29, 
1800,  m  Leonard  Tuttle),  Timothy  (b  Feb  23,  1748-9,  d  Apl  10,  1819,  m 
(second  wife)  Lucy  Hall  Dec  23,  1783,  and  had  Frances,  b  Oct  7,  1784,  d 
Apl  14,  1791;  Eliza  M.  b  July  4,  1786,  d  y;  Timothy  b  May  31,  1788,  d 
Dec  24,  1863,  m  Anna  Lane,  rem  to  Erie,  Pa.,  and  had  Frederick,  James, 
Lucy,  Caroline,  Alfred,  John,  Timothy,  Elizabeth,  William,  and  Har- 
vey; Harvey  Hall  (M.  D.)  b  Mch  26,  1790,  d  1865  in  Hastings,  Minn.,  m 
Ellen  Pale  and  had  Augusta  m  Dr.  Augustus  Hackett,  Alexander, 
physician,  Marrietta  m  John  Cox,  William  m  Ada  Thurston,  and  Lucy 
m  Ira  Paine;  and  Frances  b  July  12,  1792,  d  July  21,  1796),  Noah  Ely  (b 
Feb  15,  1754,  d  Aug  4,  1844,  m  (1)  Prudence  Kellogg,  b  1745,  d  Mch  16, 

1 810,  dau  Amos  and (Sedgwick)  Kellogg,  and  in  181 1  m  (2)  Mary 

Bosworth,  b  1771,  d  Sep  21,  1858,  dau  Nathaniel  and  Mary  (Smith)  Bos- 
worth,  and  had  Prudence  b  1777,  d  1792;  Noah  b  Oct  20,  1778,  d  1846  at 
Council  Bluffs,  la.,  m  Cynthia  Clark,  rem  to  Michigan  in  181 6  and  to 
Council  Bluffs  later,  and  had  Pamelia  m  William  Curtiss,  Ruth  m  Philips 
Sawyer,  Charles  m  Mary  Bosworth,  Cynthia  m  Orren  Arms,  Noah  m 
Catherine  Ogden,  Prudence  m  Daniel  Mallett,  Lucy,  Adam  m  Ella 
Chase,  William  m  Judith  Stevens,  and  David;  Asher  b  1781,  d  Aug  20, 
1796;  Lucy  b  1785,  m  James  Bosworth  and  had  John  Agnew;  Elib  June 
18 — ,  d  Mch  9,  1856,  m  (1)  Rhoda  Ward  and  (2)  Catharine  Van  Alstine, 
rem  to  Sylvania,  Ohio,  and  had  Caroline  m  Isaac  Lewis,  Hiram  m  Lottie 
McMiller,  Asher  m  Emma  Wheeler,  Henry  m  Harriet  Van  Arnem, 
Sarah  m  Rev.  Luther  Mathews,  Noah,  Elizabeth,  William  m  Ellen  Page, 
Lucy  m  Oscar  Collins,  Frances  m  Luther  Sears,  and  Mary  m  Durfee 
Chase. 

M6  JOSEPH— b  Apl  8,  1708,  d  1783  in  Leverett,  Mass.,  m  Nov  4,  1737, 
Joanna  Porter  (d  Dec  12,  1766),  dau  Samuel  Porter;  lived  awhile  in 
Hadley,  Mass.  Children — Susannah  (b  July  6,  1738,  m  Jan  29,  1760, 
Willard  Wilder),  William  (b  Aug  22,  1742,  d  Aug  16,  1752),  Anna  (b 


238  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

1753,  m  Israel  Hubbard  b  1752,  son  Israel  and  Abigail  (Smith)  Hubbard 
and  rem  to  Chicago),  and  Joanna  (b  i755<m  Nahum  Ward). 

HA"  DAVID— b  Mch  9,  1712,  d  in  Sunderland  in  1787,  m  1743  Miriam 
Cooler.  Children— Moses  (b  1744),  David  (b  1748),  Gideon  (b  1751,  m 
Esther  Mills  and  had  Luther,  Chester,  Lucy,  Rose,  Fauny,  Philander,  and 
Jason),  William  (b  1754,  m  Hannah  Bliss  of  Leverett  and  had  Rebecca 
m  Giles  Hubbard,  Pamelia,  Caroline,  Fanny,  Joseph,  Parley,  William, 
Amanda,  and  Hannah),  Miriam  (b  1755,  m  Philip  Russell),  and  Elijah 
(b  1757,  d  1834,  m  Abigail  Clapp  of  Sunderland  and  had  Moses  who  m 
Levinia  Prescott,  Zebuna,  Elijah,  Hannah,  Tabitha,  Abigail,  David, 
Martha,  and  Miriam). 

SONS    OF    ISAAC    AND    CHRISTINE    (GUNN)    HUBBARD. 

M8  ISRAEL— b  in  Sunderland,  Mass.,  Jan  18,  1725,  d  there  Apl  21, 
1 81 7,  m  Abigail  Smith,  dau  Nathaniel  and  Abigail  (Allis)  Smith.  Chil- 
dren—Mary  (b  1747,  m  Seth  Field),  Jonathan  (b  1750,  m  Hannah 
Barnard,  rem  to  Oneida  County,  N.  Y.),  Israel  (b  1751,  m  Anne  Hub- 
bard, b  1753,  dau  Joseph  and  Joanna  (Porter)  Hubbard,  and  rem  to 
Ohio),  Caleb  (b  Apl  23,  1754,  d  in  Sunderland  Apl  7,  1850,  aged  96, 
called  Major,  was  at  Bunker  Hill;  he  left  an  interesting  written  record 
of  his  war  services,  copies  being  in  existence  among  his  descendants;  he 
m  (1)  Tryphenia  Montague,  b  1757,  d  Mch  27,  1788,  and  had  Tliczia,  b 
1780,  m  William  Bowman;  Noadiah,b  1783,  m  Sarah  Graves,  possibly 
rem 'to  N.  Y.  State;  Persis,  b  1784,  m  Elisha  Field;  and  Oreama,  b  1787, 
m  Zimri  Marsh;  Caleb  m  (2)  Lucretia  Ashley,  b  1768,  d  Apl  12,  1853, 
dau  Joseph  and  Ann  (Drury)  Ashley,  and  had  Tryphenia,  b  1789,  m  (1) 
Charles  Kellogg,  (2)  Timothy  Henderson;  and  Ashley,  b  1793,  d  Feb  8, 
1S61,  m  (1)  Nancy  Henderson,  b  1797,  d  Jan  3,  1821,  and  had  Harriet, 
b  1 81 9,  m  Christopher  C.  Adams;  and  Jared,  b  1S20;  he  m  (2)  Betsey 
Dole,  b  1794,  d  Mch  22,  1862,  and  had  Nancy,  b  1823;  Parker,  b  1825, 
living  on  homestead  in  Sunderland  in  1894;  Elizabeth,  b  1830,111  George 
Alvord;  Caleb  Trowbridge,  b  1835,  d  Feb  28,  1882;  and  Stephen  Ashley, 
b  in  Sunderland  Aug  20,  1827,  d  in  Hartford,  Ct,  Jan  11,  1890,  m  June 
11,  1859,  Elizabeth  Boyd  of  Winstead,  Ct.,  where  he  conducted  a  news- 
paper until  summoned  to  Hartford  by  Gen.  Joseph  Hawley,  who  with 
his  company  of  soldiers  were  early  on  the  field  of  conflict  in  the  late 
civil  war;  Stephen  Ashley  Hubbard  remained  for  30  years  in  the  Hart- 
ford Courant  Office),  Abigail  (b  1756,  m  John  Montague),  Keziah  (b 
1758,  m  Leonard  Clark),  Huldah  (b  1761,  m  Simeon  Graves),  Sabra  (b 
1765),  Phineas  (b  1768),  and  Lucius  (b  May  28,  1763,  d  June  6,  1788, 
lawyer  at  Chester,  Vt,  also  scientist,  m  Anne  Pomeroy  of  Northfield, 
Mass.,  and  had  Lucia,  b  1796,  m  Henry  Field;  Annie,  b  1799;  Marianna, 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  MERRIAM.  239 

b  1801;  Lucius  Virgilius  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line  Lucius  Lee  Hub- 
bard); Sabina,  b  1807;  and  Charles,  b  (?)  1805,  m  Margaret  Van  Valken- 
burgh,  rem  to  Renssalaer  County,  X.  V.,  prominent  whig,  sheriff  of 
county,  and  had  Mary,  b  [835,  m  John  Huntington;  Lucius  Frederick 
(see  Prominent  American  Hubbards);  and  Margaret,  b  [837). 

MD  GILES— b  Sep  17,  1742,  d  Aug  21,  1X24,111  Editha  Field  of  Sunder- 
land.    Children— Elisha    (b    1769,    d    in    Sunderland    [826,    m    Achsah 
Graves  and  had  Parley   b    1796,  m   Samuel   Lyman;  Moses  b  1800,  m 
Keziah   Lyman;   Elvira   b    [802,  m    Horace   Lyman;  and   (Rev)   Ochus 
Grave*  b  1805,  m  Martha  Smith  and   d   1852),  Giles  (b  Jan  9,  1771,  d  in 
Leverett,  Mass.,  .852,111  (1)  Rebecca   Smith   Hubbard,  dan  William  and 
Hannah  (Laker)  Hubbard,  (d  1808)  and  had  Rodolphus  Baker  (see  Am- 
herst College  grads);  M"  Dickman  (see  elsewhere);  Emelint  Amanda,b 
July  1,  1805,111  in  [832  Nathaniel  Gray  and  had  Giles  Hubbard  b  May 
16,  1834,  Henry  Martyn  b  Nov  28,  1856,6  1X76,  Edward  Payson  b  May  3. 
1842,  George  Dickman  b  Feb  14,  1844,  and  Emma  AmandabFeb  3,  1X47; 
George,  b   1808,   d   1810.     Giles  m   Feb    14.   [816,  (2)  Sarah  (Wheelock) 
Cowles  widow  David  Cowles  of  Amherst,  (3)  Sarah  Childs  of  Deeriield, 
and  (4)  Anna  Childs  Webster),   Lui  Ri  1  m   (b    [772,  111  William  Delano), 
Iflio   Phineas    (see    elsewhere),    Sylvanus   (b    1777,    d    1856,    lived    in 
Williamsburgh,  m  Abigail  Thayer  and  had    William,  b  1X01,  d  1868,  m 
Mary  Warren;  Samantha,  b  1803,  111  Cotton  Hayden;  Elizabeth,  b  1805, 
m  Nathaniel  Sears;  Amelia,  b  1807,  m  (1)  Ebenezer  Warner  and  (2) 
Lewis  Cleveland;   Eli,  b   1809,   m    (1)   Mary  Cowles  (? Nancy  Cowles, 
Amherst)   and  (2)    Frances  Ashton;  and   Sylvanus,  b    1815,  m  Joanna 
Nicols),  Rufus  (b  1779,  d    1X2X,  m   Irene   Montague  and  had  Phela,  b 
1  ■:::  Rufus,  b  [825;  and  Achsah,  b  1828,  m  Alden  Graves),  Editha  (b 
17- 1,  m  Beal  Crocker  and  had  Lucy,  Fidelia,  Stolon,  Editha,  Fanny  and 
others),  Martin  (b   1783,  d  1X60,  111  (1)  Jerusha  Clark,  d    1X37   and  had 
George,  b    1810,   d  1867,  m    Lucy  Ficdd,   and  had    Susan  M.,    b    1848; 
Elisha,  b  181 1,  d  1833;  Mary  J.,  b  1814,  m  Fdson  Wait,  of  Easthampton, 
Mass.;  Martin  /:.,  b  [816,  m  ( 1  )  Harriet  Montague  and  had  Fannie  J., 
b  1843  and  George  M.  b  1X54,  m  (2)  Elvira  Alvord  and  in  1868  (3)  Eliza 
Dickinson    and    had  Elisha    M.    b    1870  and    Hubert  Alans  »n   b   1S74; 
Claudius  B.,b  1819,  d  1873,  m  (1)  Martha  Darling  and  hid  Ellen  M, 
b  1850,  and  in   1852  m  (2)  Cordelia  Brooks  and  had  Lizzie  Cordelia  b 
1855;  Alanson,  b  1822,  m  (1)  Julia  E.  Darling,  d  1851  and  had  Julia  E, 
b  185  1,  m  in  1852  (2)  Susan  Ludden,  d  1869  and  had  William  L.,b  [855, 
and  Mary  L.  b  i860,  and  m  in  1870  (3)  Althea  Parmenter;  Mart ha  /:.  b 
[824;  andF/is/ia,b  1827,  d  1858;  Martin    Hubbard  m   i860  (2)  Hope 
Miller),  Achsah  (b  1785,  111  Ebenezer  Higgins),  and  Dorothy  (b  1790, 
m  (2d  wife)  William  Delano  of  Sunderland  and  had  Henry). 


24o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

SON    OF    GILES    AND    EDITHA    (FIELD)    HUBBARD. 

M10  PHINEAS— b  in  Sunderland,  Mass.,  Mch  22,  1775,  d  in  Stan- 
stead,  Can.,  Feb  2,  1842,  m  June  22,  1797,  Catherine  Nash  of  Williams- 
burg, Mass.,  who  was  b  there  May  17,  1779.  In  1805  PHINEAS  HUB- 
BARD, hoping  to  improve  his  earthly  fortunes,  started  for  Canada  in 
midwinter  upon  an  ox-sled  containing  his  household  effects,  wife  and 
three  small  children.  He  followed  the  course  of  the  Connecticut  River 
nearly  all  the  way,  stopping  occasionally  at  small  settlements  until  he 
reached  a  small  hamlet  called  Stanstead,  in  Canada,  just  over  the  Ver- 
mont State  line.  This  place  seemed  to  be  the  promised  land  of  his 
search,  and  he  therefore  stopped,  bought  a  farm  and  constructed  a  tan- 
nery upon  it.  He  became  soon  a  leading  citizen,  his  educational  ac- 
quirements investing  him  with  power  and  the  positions  of  magistrate 
and  deacon  of  the  church.  His  knowledge  of  letters  and  kindness  of 
heart  caused  him  to  indite  love  letters  for  the  illiterate  of  the  vicinity 
and  then  he  afterward  married  the  happy  couples.  He  left  a  large- 
sized  family  who  gave  a  good  account  of  themselves.  Children  (three 
eldest  b  in  Sunderland,  balance  in  Stanstead) — Benjamin  Franklin  (b 
June  9,  1798,  d  Feb  6,  1877.  He  was  well-educated,  became  a  school- 
teacher, druggist,  postmaster  and  author  of  an  entertaining  history  of 
Stanstead  County  called  "  Forests  and  Clearings."  Hem  abt  1S31  (1) 
Harriet  Nash  and  had  Naomi  Catherine,  b  July  15,  1832,  manager  tel- 
ephone and  telegraph  offices  and  postmistress  at  Stanstead,  Quebec; 
Mary  Graydon,  b  Apl  28,  1836,  d  Nov  29,  1870,  m  Mch  31,  1863,  Osmond 
Boynton,  d  Feb  20,  1867,  and  had  Harriet  Amanda,  b  Dec  31,  1863,  m 
June  28,  1888,  Lewis  A.  Young  and  had  Frank  Hubbard,  Amy  Laura 
and  William  French;  and  Emma  Elvira,  b  Oct  17,  1865,  m  Sep  18,  1888, 
a  merchant  at  Derby  Line,  Vt.,  James  W.  Abbey,  and  had  Arthur 
Eugene  Wood;  Almira  Nash,  b  June  5,  1838,  m  May  20,  1862,  Timothy 
W.  Lee,  d  Feb  8,  1892,  in  the  west,  and  had  Bermietta  Naomi,  Lilla 
Bell,  Rosa,  Monnie  May  and  Myrtle  Ray,  who  all  live  in  Dakota;  Har- 
riet Julia,  b  Aug  26,  1846,  m  Jan  2,  1866,  A.  N.  Whitney,  d  Jan  23,  1877, 
Professor  of  Music  at  Wesleyan  Female  College,  Macon,  Ga.,  and  had 
Minnie  Clara,  Albert  Franklin,  Newell,  Rosa  Julia,  Daisy  Myra  and 
Albert  Franklin;  Benjamin  Franklin  m  (2)  Annette  D.  Cummings,  no 
issue),  Austin  Osgood  (b  Aug  9,  1800,  d  Aug  8,  1858,  Yale  1824,  suc- 
cessful divine  and  author  of  a  grammar;  m  in  1823  (1)  MaryGraydon — 
d  1833 — and  in  1839  (2)  Julia  A.  Hayes,  d  Aug  7,  1857,  no  issue), 
Sophronia  (b  Sep  6,  1802,  d  1865,  m  William  P.  Spencer — d  1854 — and 
had  Clarissa,  Josephine,  Harriet,  Emeline,  Maria  and  William),  Persis 
S.  (b  Jan  22,  1805,  d  in  Feb,  1887,  m  Luke  Hurd  of  Newport,  P.  Q.,  and 


JOHN  HUBBARD  AND  MARY  MERRIAM.  2\\ 


OLD    HOMESTEAD    AT    HATFIELD,    MASS.,    FORMERLY 

"  hubbard's  inn." 


had  Sarah,  d  y;  Lucy  G.,  Achsah,  Samuel  Nash,  George  and  Julia),  John 

Milton  (b  June  9,  1810,  d  in  Stanstead  about  1870.  He  was  a  farmer, 
and  succeeded  to  his  father's  homestead;  was  possessed  of  excellent 
musical  taste  and  taught  singing  school.  In  1841  he  m  Lucy  D.  Wood 
of  Cornish,  N.  H.,  dau  of  Reuben  Wood  of  Rhode  Island,  and  had 
Tohn  Henry,  b  in' Stanstead  June  30,  1842,  who  left  the  farm,  learned 
to  be  an  apothecary,  and  settled  in  Cambridge,  Mass.,  where  he  now 
carries  on  the  drug  business.  He  m  in  1867  Ann  Matilda  Grover  of 
Portsmouth,  N.  H.,  dau  of  Eliphalet  and  Mary  Ann  (Gookm) 
Grover,  no'  children;  Helen  Maria,  m  James  Fisher;  Clarissa 
White  '  m  Arthur  E.  Wood;  Corn  I  la  Wood,  m  Charles  N.  Hill; 
and  Austin  Lyman,  m  Ida  Boynton  and  resides  in  Manitou,  Colo) 
Phineas  Jr  (b  July  10,  1808,  merchant,  postmaster  at  Eaton,  P.  O.,  and 
Stanstead,  P.  0.,  m  abt  1836  Zilpha  White,  d  1846,  and  had  John  U  ..  d 
y  and  Ellen,  d  abt  1867),  Achsah  (b  Oct  15,  1812,  d  unm  Sep  3,  ^33), 
Catherine  Nash  (b  May  28,  1816,  d  in  April,  1SS5,  m  Deacon  Samuel 
\  Hurd  of  Sherbrooke,  P.  Q.,  and  had  Dr.  Edward  Parson,  Lien 
C  Lucy  Jane,  Laura  Ann  and  Samuel  Augustine),  Samuel  N.  (b  Apl 
24'  1820,  d  Apl  3,  183O,  and  Henry  (b  July  .,  1825,  received  degree  of 


242  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

A.  M.  from  two  colleges,  principal  of  academy  in  Craftsbury,  Vt,  and 
now  Inspector  of  Schools,  District  of  St.  Francis,  P.  Q.  He  now  re- 
sides in  Sherbrooke,  P.  Q.,  and  has  been  a  leader  in  education  for  many 
years,  and  has  elevated  very  much  Protestant  education  in  the  Province 
of  Quebec.  He  m  Nov,  1854,  Lois  Fuller  Carr,  dau  of  David  F.  and 
Huldah  (Leavitt)  Carr  of  Waterford,  Vt,  and  had  four  children,  viz.  : 
Phineas,  b  in  Craftsbury  Aug  24,  1855,  lives  in  Cambridge,  Mass, 
where  he  removed  in  1880;  engaged  in  the  linen  dry  goods  business 
in  Boston,  a  member  of  the  firm  of  T.  D.  Whitney  &  Co;  m  Mch  28, 
1878,  Lucinda  Ann  Reed  of  Durham,  P.  Q.,  dau  Benjamin  Towns  and 
Eusebia  (Stevens)  Reed  and  had  Henry  Reed  b  in  Sherbrooke,  P.  Q., 
Mch  13,  1879;  Mary  Carr  b  in  Cambridge,  Mass,  Aug  31,  1883,  and 
Elizabeth  Katherine  b  in  Cambridge  Mch  17,  1890;  Rev.  George  Henry 
bin  Barnston,  P.  Q.,  June  2,  1857,  rem  to  and  is  now  pastor  of  the 
Trinitarian  Congregational  Church  in  Norton,  Mass;  m  June  13,  1889, 
Deborah  Bowditch '  Dean,  dau  Rev.  Myron  Munson  and  Harriet  Car- 
penter (Moriarty)  Dean  and  had  Lois  bin  Norton,  Mass,  Sep  3,  1893; 
and  Carlos  and  Caroline,  twins,  b  in  Danville,  P.  Q.,  Apl,  i860,  d  y). 

SON   OF  GILES  AND  REBECCA   SMITH   (HUBBARD)   HUBBARD. 

M11  DICKMAN— b  July  15,  1802,  d  in  Palmyra,  Mo.,  in  1836,  m  in 
1826  Elizabeth  Cooley  Field  (m  after  his  death  Elijah  Ingram  of  Lev- 
erett  and  had  Elizabeth  Field  b  1844,  m  Thomas  William  Hubbard  of 
Union  City,  Mich).  Children — Franklin  (b  July  13,  1827,  rem  to  Toledo, 
Ohio,  m  Sarah  Lyman  of  Sunderland,  Mass.,  and  had  Moses  RodolpJius  b 
Aug  31, 186 1,  d  1862;  Kate  Eliza  b  Apl  1,  1863;  Grace  Amelia  b  July  16, 
1868;  Mary  Edith  b  Dec  2,  1872;  Franklin  b  Aug  26,  1874,  d  1875; 
Charles  Dickman  b  Jan  1,  1876,  d  1876),  Rodolphus  (b  1829,  d  1830), 
George  (b  1829,  d  1852),  Rodolphus  (b  Apl  17,  1832,  rem  to  McGregor, 
Iowa.,  m  in  1864  Hannah  E.  Giles,  d  Apl  18,  1880,  and  had  Giles  Gray,  b 
June  27,  1865 ;  Mary  Laura  and  Marion  Elizabeth  b  Aug  31,  1868;  Emma 
Frances,  b  Dec  8,  1871;  Anna  Giles,  b  Apl  16,  1880),  and  Charles  Dick- 
man  of  Dover,  111.  (b  Jan  25,  1835,  d  1863, m  Kate  E.  Lee  and  had  George 
Wallace  h  i860,  d  1884). 


Cling  to  thy  home:    If  there  the  meanest  shed  yield  thee  a  hearth  and  shelter  for  thy  head; 
And  some  poor  plot  with  vegetables  stored  be  all  that  Heaven  allots  thee  for  thy  board; 
Unsavory  bread,  and  herbs  that  scattered  grow  wild  on  the  river  bank  or  mountain  brow; 
Yet  e'en  this  cheerless  mansion  shall  provide  more  heart's  repose  than  all  the  world  beside.— 

Leonidas  of  Tarentum. 


IN  the  beginning  of  this  volume  is  a  view  taken  of  an  old  Hubbard 
house  that  once  belonged  to  the  Swart  family.  It  is  located  at 
Holmdel,  near  Red  Bank,  Monmouth  County,  N.  J.  When  Rebecca 
Swart  married  Nov  7,  1785,  Dr.  Jacobus  Hubbard,  a  surgeon  in  the 
Revolutionary  War,  they  settled  in  this  homestead,  which  for  years 
prior  had  been  occupied  by  various  generations  of  the  Swart  family. 
Since  the  foregoing  date  this  property  has  been  possessed  by  descend- 
ants of  the  Long  Island  Hubbards,  whose  first  ancestor  was  James 
Hubbard  of  Gravesend.  Near  the  house  is  an  old  cemetery  where  Dr. 
Jacobus  Hubbard  was  buried  and  aUo  many  others  of  the  family.  The 
house  is  picturesquely  situated,  and  is  surrounded  by  magnificent  stately 
trees  and  makes  an  interesting  landmark  in  that  locality. 


In  1733  John  Kent  purchased  a  house  and  some  land  upon  what  has 
now  become  South  Main  Street,  Middletown,  Ct.  How  long  this  house 
had  been  built  prior  to  his  purchase  is  unknown,  but  it  is  generally  con- 
ceded to  be,  at  least,  the  second  oldest  house  in  town,  the  Samuel 
Gaylord  mansion  on  Washington  Street,  built  in  1720,  being,  perhaps, 
older.  John  Kent  died  in  February,  1775,  and  left  the  property  to 
Hannah,  his  daughter,  who  soon  became  the  first  wife  of  Hon.  Elijah 
Hubbard.  The  house  is  practically  unchanged  in  its  appearance  to-day, 
at  least  exteriorly,  and  in  front  of  it  stands  about  the  largest  and  most 
majestic  elm  in  Middletown.  When  Elijah  Hubbard  died  it  was  inher- 
ited by  his  daughter,  Elizabeth  Hubbard,  who  married  Thomas  Mather, 
an  Albany  merchant,  and  who  left  it  to  her  son,  Thomas  G.  Mather 
243 


244  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

In  1837  Hon.  Samuel  Dickinson  Hubbard,  the  half  brother  of  Elizabeth 
(Hubbard)  Mather,  bought  it  from  Thomas  G.  Mather  and  occupied  it 
for  some  years.  While  he  lived  here  he  was  a  member  of  Congress 
from  Connecticut.  He  afterward  moved  into  a  fine  mansion  on  High 
Street,  and  the  property  was  sold  about  1S54  to  Jonathan  Kilbourne, 
whose  daughter,  Elizabeth  Kilbourne,  now  owns  it.  It  is  to  be  re- 
gretted that  it  is  now  out  of  the  possession  of  the  Hubbard  family. 


When  John  Hubbard  (who  married  Mary  Merriam)  went  from  Weth- 
ersfield,  or  Glastonbury,  to  Hadley  in  1660-61  he  had  four  children, 
Mary,  John,  Hannah  and  Jonathan.  While  living  in  Hadley  five  more 
were  born,  named  Daniel,  Mercy,  Isaac,  Mary  and  Sarah.  After  1672 
he  removed  to  Hatfield  and  located  upon  the  site  where  now  is  the  resi- 
dence of  Roswell  Hubbard,  one  of  his  descendants.  Here  John  Hub- 
bard died  in  1702  and  his  son  Isaac  Hubbard  inherited  the  homestead. 
Isaac  subsequently  removed  to  Sunderland  and  was  well  known  there 
as  a  good  citizen  and  church  deacon.  Some  of  his  children  remained 
in  Hatfield  upon  the  homestead.  How  long  the  first  house  stood  is  not 
known,  but  it  came  into  the  possession  of  Elisha  Hubbard  in  1760,  and 
then  became  famous  as  "Hubbard's  Inn."  Elisha  died  Apl  11,  1768, 
leaving  five  daughters  (Hannah,  Lucy,  Anna,  Lucretia  and  Sarah),  and 
two  sons  (Elisha  and  John).  His  widow  and  son  Elisha  continued  to 
conduct  the  tavern,  which  became  shortly  afterward  invested  with  his- 
toric interest,  as  Continental  troops  passed  and  repassed  its  doors.  Here 
were  quartered  one  entire  winter  the  French  staff  officers  under  com- 
mand of  Count  Rochambeau,  who,  when  ennui  was  upon  them,  cut  with 
diamonds*  their  names  and  epigrammatic  sentences  of  hostile  portent 
to  their  British  adversaries.  Here  also  one  of  General  Washington's 
Quartermasters,  General  Epaphroditus  Champion,  loved  to  linger. 
He  lingered  so  effectually  that  he  eventually  married  Lucretia  Hub- 
bard, one  of  the  widow's  five  daughters,  thus  proving  himself  to  have 
been  a  "  gallant  Champion  in  peace  as  well  as  war." 

The  house,  built  upon  the  site  of  the  old  tavern,  sits  upon  a  gradu- 
ated terrace  running  up  from  the  road,  or  Hill  Street,  and  is  surrounded 
by  the  most  beautiful  of  towering  elms,  the  cool  shade  of  which  in  sum- 
mer is  a  paradise  for  dreamers  and  dusty  wayfarers.  It  is  to  be  hoped 
that  it  will  always  be  inhabited  by  Hubbards. 


The  old  Hubbard  homestead  at  Guilford,  Ct.,  is  prolific  of  incident 
and  attractive  to  the  eye.  September  22,  1648,  George  Hubbard 
came  from  Milford  (where  he  had  lived  nine  years  after  his  removal 
from  Wethersfield  in   1639)   and  bought  land  in  Guilford  from  Jacob 


Upon  the  window  panes. 


OLD  HOMESTEADS.  245 

Sheafe,  who  thereupon  removed  with  his  family  to  Boston.  On  this 
land  George  Hubbard  domiciled  himself,  and  at  his  death  bequeathed 
the  house  and  homelot  to  his  youngest  son  Daniel  (the  only  one  of  his 
sons  who  came  to  Guilford)  and  made  him  sole  executor.  In  17 15  the 
old  building  was  torn  down  by  Daniel  and  a  large  and  spacious  house 
erected  upon  the  old  foundations,  which  was  finished  in  17 17,  and  of 
which  the  engraving  is  a  correct  likeness.  The  roof,  however,  was 
raised  by  the  fifth  Daniel  in  descent  from  George  some  time  about  1800, 
and  since  that  period  a  wing  and  other  additions  have  been  made,  so 
that  there  are  now  twenty-five  rooms  in  the  structure.  There  have 
been  seven  Daniels  in  direct  line  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford, 
five  of  these  having  been,  it  is  claimed,  inheritors  of  this  house  and 
homelot,  which  have  never  been  out  of  the  possession  of  the  family,  and 
never  will  be  while  there  remains  kin  to  leave  it  to.  The  house  is  a 
jutted  one  and  stands  on  Broad  at  the  head  of  Fair  Street,  and  is  replete 
with  old  fireplaces,  bake  ovens,  spacious  low-ceiling  rooms  and  closets, 
small  window-panes,  sound  oak  timbers  in  the  framework,  and  is  in  an 
excellent  state  of  preservation.  Here  Rev.  Bela  Hubbard,  D.  D.,  was 
born  in  1739.  He  owned  a  part  of  this  house  and  homelot  and  sold  his 
share  to  "  Mrs.  Deborah,  Daniel  and  William  Hubbard  "  May  8,  1790. 
In  his  deed  he  states  that  one-half  of  the  house  and  homelot  was  "  left 
me  by  my  Honored  Father  Daniel  containing  by  eftimation,  four  acres, 
be  it  more  or  less,"  etc.  The  place  is  now  owned  and  occupied  by  John 
Bartlett  Hubbard  and  his  family  and  Miss  Mary  Linsley  Hubbard,  who 
possesses  the  old  deed  Bela  Hubbard  gave  of  it  and  also  the  old  Linen 
Chest  George  Hubbard  brought  over  in  1633,  which  also  has  always 
been  in  the  family's  possession.  May  this  interesting  old  homestead  be 
standing  when  the  "  last  trump  "  blows  is  the  fervent  wish  of  all  its 
many  fervent  admirers. 

Where  now  stands  the  residence  of  Mr.  Isaac  Libby  (built  in  1826)  in 
South  Berwick,  Me.,  there  was  erected  early  in  the  seventeenth  century 
a  stoutly  built  log  structure  about  fifty  feet  long  and  perhaps  twenty 
feet  in  width,  which  was  known  all  over  that  section  as  the  Philip  Hub- 
bard Garrison  House.  It  is  supposed  that  the  first  Philip  Hubbard  of 
Kittery,  Me.,  built  the  structure  and  used  it  both  for  his  family  domicile 
and  as  a  fortification  for  himself,  family,  and  neighbors  against  savage 
Indian  attacks.  It  fronted  the  south,  and  the  highway  ran  close  by  the 
western  end.  It  was  one  room  deep,  and,  opening  to  the  south,  was  a 
door  at  the  corner  that  entered  the  bar-room;  for  in  later  days  it  was 
used  as  a  tavern,  before  which  stopped  the  hungry  and  thirsty  passen- 
gers from  the  stage  coach,  together  with  driver  and  four  horses,  to 


246 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


investigate  the  quality  of  its  refreshments  for  man  and  beast.     This 
stage  ran  from  Berwick  to  Portsmouth,  N.  H.,  and  on  to  Boston,  Mass. 
A  large  chimney  arose  from  the  western  end,  in  which  the  traditional 
back-log  crackled  and  flamed.     Further  along  toward  the  eastern  end 
was  another  large  chimney,  with  bake  ovens,  which  the  family  used  for 
their  private  domestic  comforts.     The  beams  showed  plainly  overhead, 
and  the  walls,  it  is  alleged,  were  boarded  up  and  down.     The  family 
door  was  a  huge  double  one,  probably  of  oak,  to  resist  unwelcome  red- 
handed  midnight  marauders.     The  tipper  part  of  the  garrison  house 
jutted  over  the  lower,  and  opening  downward  were  holes  made  to  fire 
upon  the  enemy  when  they  approached  too  near.     It  was  the  safest  re- 
treat in  the  vicinity,  and  stood  for  over  a  century.     In  the  rooms  were 
the  usual  old-fashioned   household  appurtenances,  consisting  of   solid 
chairs,  desks,  chests,  and  tables  of  the  hardest  wood.     The  spinning- 
wheel  and  the  loom  were  also  there,  as  well  as  utensils  for  dressing 
leather.     It  is  not  known  how  many  rooms  were  in  it,  but  they  were 
numerous  and  large.     There  is  yet  living  a  lady  who  lived  in  it  when  a 
girl,  but  her  memory  fails  her  as  to  the  number  of  rooms.     Back  of  the 
old  house  grew  several  scraggy-limbed  pear  trees,  the  trunks  of  which 
were  nearly  the  circumference  of  a  hogshead.     The  fruit  of  these  trees 
was  made  into  a  liquor  called  "  perry."     Perhaps  Philip  Hubbard,  Sr., 
planted  them.     Near  by,  on  the  edge  of  Birchen  Point  Brook,  was  an 
immense  tan-yard,  comprising  two  acres,  where  Philip  Hubbard  dressed 
into  wearing  apparel  and  shoes  the  skins  of  wild  and  domestic  animals. 
The  old  pits  are  now  beds  of  flag.     The  brook  has  its  source  at  the  foot 
of  Rocky  Hills,  and  winds  its  crooked  way  a  distance  of  two  miles  or 
more  and  empties  into  a  creek,  up  which  the  tide  flows  at  the  south  end 
of  Birchen  Point.      The  Newichawannock  River,  about  one -fourth  of  a 
mile  wide,  was  90  rods  away  at  the  western  end.     Nearly  between  the 
river  and  this  house  was  the  garrison  house  of  Daniel  Stone.   There  are 
along  the  route  of  Birchen  Point  Brook  low  places  where  nothing  grows 
but  water-grasses,  flags,  and  cat-o'-nine  tails — places  where  the  water 
glides  over  a  bed  of  shining  sand;  others,  where  it  flows  silently  under 
the  shadow  of  clumps  of  alders,  where  patience  sometimes  rewards  the 
fisher  with  a  few  trout.     Near  the  end  of  the  water-way  it  foams  and 
gurgles  and  .sings  over  a  bed  of  rocks,  once  the  foundation  of  a  saw-mill. 
The  estate  extended  down  to  the  Fowling  Marsh,  which  was  alive 
with  screaming,  cackling  water-fowl,  the  paradise  for  the  neighboring 
Nimrod.     Near  the  house  was  a  cemetery  "  4  rods  square,  set  off  to  be 
used  as  a  Hubbard  Burying  Ground  forever."     Illustrations  of   these 
points  of  interest  are  given  elsewhere.    The  old  garrison  house  has  now 
vanished,  but  it  still  savors  the  recollections  lingering  in  the  memory  of 


OLD  HOMESTEADS. 


'■47 


old  residents  and  descendants  around  Berwick,  Me.,  who  have  had  re- 
counted to  their  eager  ears  its  past  historic  career  and  pleasant  associa- 
tions. 


The  old  Hubbard  Homestead  at  Long;  Hill,  Ct,  is  now  standing  upon 
the  soil  that  in  its  virgin  purity  is  supposed  to  have  been  originally  as- 
signed to  the  first  George  Hubbard,  who  helped  found  in  1650  the  little 
settlement  of  Mattabesett,  that  afterward  became  Middletown.  It  finally 
came  to  be  owned  by  one  of  the  fourth  generation,  Nehemiah  Hubbard, 
who  was  born  in  Middletown  July  22,  1721,  the  son  of  Nathaniel  and 
Sarah  (Johnson)  Hubbard.    Nehemiah  erected  this  house  when  he  came 
to  manhood,  and  it  sheltered,  beside  himself,  a  loving  wife  and  thirteen 
children.    It  was,  and  still  is  (being  substantially  unchanged),  the  typical 
New  England  homestead,  with  its  adjacent  stone  walls,  apple  orchard, 
oak  and  elm  trees  casting  delightful  shade  near  by,  and  an  old-fashioned 
well-sweep  and  bucket  that  will  yet  raise  to  your  lips  the  clearest  of 
pure  water.    There  is  also  to  be  seen  near  by  the  long  stone  horseblock 
and  the  shallow  concaved  stone  that  served  to  catch  and  run  off  the  lye 
in  the  bottom  of  the  leach-tub.  In  the  house  is  the  long,  narrow  kitchen, 
o-uiltless  of  lath   and  plaster,  with  bedroom  at  one  end,  pantry  at  the 
other,  and  a  huge  fireplace  between,  and  across  which  extends  a  beam, 
from  which  still  hang  the  pot-hooks  and  trammels  that  supported  the 
numerous  kettles  below,  that  were  in  "  ye  olden  time  "  necessarily  filled 
with  beats,  turnips,  cabbages  and  potatoes,  to  quiet  the  clamour  of  thir- 
teen young  mouths.     The  chimney  is  an  enormous  structure  of  stone, 
with  a  few  bricks  at  the  top,  and  takes  up  nearly  half  the  area  of  the 
house.     The  rooms  are  large,  but  have  low  ceilings,  and  in  one  of  them 
could  be  heard  (far  into  the  night  many  times)  the  fascinating  whirr  of 
the  spinning-wheel  that  spun  the  coarse  but  durable  cloth  that  enveloped, 
besides  the  father's  and  mother's,  the  thirteen  small  bodies  aforesaid.  In 
this  house  were  born,  of  the  thirteen,  five  trusty  and  true  Revolutionary 
War  patriots,  namely,  Isaac  (see  elsewhere),  Nehemiah  Jr.  (see  Prom- 
inent  American    Hubbards),    Elisha    (hereinafter   mentioned),   David 
(who  contracted  a  brain  fever  while  returning  from  the  army,  ultimately 
making  him  helpless  for  life),  and  Jacob  (who  was  a  teamster  and  pres- 
ent at  the  battle  of  Saratoga).     There  were  no  more  sons  to  volunteer, 
Mathew  having  died  young  and  Nathaniel  also,  the  latter  being  swept, 
when  a  young  man,  off  the  yard-arm  of  his  ship  while  furling  sail  for  a 
less  courageous  shipmate  in  a  terrific  gale  off  the  coast  of  Ireland  while 
sailing  homeward.     As  a  fair  sketch  of  the  life  of  a  Revolutionary  sol- 
dier, the  writer  presents  herewith  a  copy  of  a  paper  read  by  Mrs.  Mary 
Hubbard  Bunce  before  the  Wadsworth  Chapter  of  the  Middletown  (Ct.) 


248  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Daughters  of  the  Revolution,  herself  the  granddaughter  of  Elisha,  one 
of  these  patriots,  and  the  present  owner  of  the  old  homestead: 

"  Into  this  house  its  owner  brought  his  bride,  Sarah  Sill,*  with  whom 
he  had  fallen  in  love  at  first  sight  when  she,  a  blue-eyed  slip  of  a  girl 
only  twelve  years  old,  was  picking  wild  flowers  by  the  wayside.  Here 
was  born  one  October  morning  a  boy  for  whom  stern  work  was  waiting, 
little  as  he  dreamed  of  it.  The  fourth  child  in  a  family  of  thirteen,  all 
but  two  of  whom  lived  to  maturity,  he  seems  to  have  brought  into  the 
world  as  his  special  endowment  a  vigorous  constitution  and  cheerful 
temper,  which  would  do  him  good  service  in  the  trying  time  to  come. 
Small  chance  was  there  in  that  busy  time  of  much  petting.  The  music 
that  lulled  him  to  sleep  was  more  likely  to  have  been  the  whirr  of  his 
mother's  wheel  than  any  lullaby  she  found  time  to  sing,  and  after  a  brief 
reign  of  eighteen  months  he  abdicated  the  throne  of  babyhood  in  favor 
of  a  younger  claimant. 

"  Indeed,  they  followed  each  other  so  rapidly  that  the  poor  father, 
hard  pressed  to  find  names,  seems  to  have  opened  his  Bible  at  Genesis 
and,  beginning  with  Sarah,  Isaac  and  Jacob,  gone  steadily  on  to  the 
New  Testament  names  of  Matthew,  Nathaniel,  Mary  and  Phebe.  Being 
by  this  time  as  far  along  as  2nd  Kings,  the  little  one  was  named  Elisha, 
and  henceforth,  promoted  from  babyhood,  his  place  was  among  the 
workers,  though  he  could  do  no  more  than  rock  the  little  sister's  cradle 
or  bring  kindlings  for  the  fire.  How  the  busy  mother  of  this  host  kept 
them  clothed  or  even  fed  is  more  than  a  modern  woman  can  compre- 
hend, for  all  this  was  in  the  day  when  every  article  of  food  or  clothing 
must  be  evolved  from  the  raw  material.  Given  the  land  and  the  plow, 
the  farmer  himself  must  be  the  third  factor  in  that  problem  of  domestic 
comfort  which  his  busy  hands  wrought  out.  Never  in  this  old  house 
could  the  music  of  wheel  and  loom  cease  if  this  troop  of  boys  and  girls 
were  to  be  clothed,  and  where  in  the  brief  twenty-four  hours  of  the  day 
she  found  time  for  its  necessary  labors  a  wiser  head  than  mine  must 
tell.  Verily  the  labors  of  the  good  wife  in  Proverbs  sink  into  insig- 
nificance beside  such  toil  as  this.  Yet  it  neither  shortened  nor  saddened 
their  lives,  for  this  husband  and  wife  kept  step  together  for  sixty-six 
years,  and  came  down  to  the  close  of  their  pilgrimage  a  cheerful  pair, 
whom  even  death  could  not  separate  but  by  a  few  months. 


*  At  the  home  of  her  father,  Joseph  Sill,  of  Lyme  or  Saybrook,  Ct.,  was  built  in  secret  the  first 
American  torpedo  boat,  that  was  designed  to  blow  up  part  of  the  British  fleet,  then  anchored  off  shore 
from  there.  The  project  failed  because  "  Long  Lige,"  the  navigator,  who  was  to  anchor  it  under 
Admiral  Howe's  ship,  claimed  that  he  became  "narvous  "  at  the  critical  juncture  because,  in  feeling 
for  his  usual  quid  of  tobacco,  there  was  none  to  be  found,  and  the  "  turtle-back"  (as  it  was  called) 
thus  became  unmanageable,  and,  drifting  away  from  the  ship,  exploded  harmlessly  at  the  appointed 
time.  Though  doing  no  material  damage,  it  frightened  from  their  mooringe  the  whole  British  fleet. 


OLD  HOMESTEADS.  249 

"  By  the  time  the  little  Elisha  was  four  years  old  he  was  among  the 
scholars  of  the  district  school,  where  he  learned  (if  he  learned  nothing- 
else)  that  the  chief  end  of  man  is  to  glorify  God  and  enjoy  him  forever. 
An  active,  hardy  boy,  he  could  compel  the  most  prosaic  employment  to 
yield  him  some  amusement,  and  having  learned  the  trade  of  a  cooper 
he  used  to  divert  himself  by  placing  six  of  his  finished  hogsheads  in  a 
row  (one  head  being  out  of  each)  and  then  jumping  from  the  ground 
into  the  first,  from  this  into  the  second  and  so  on  through  the  row  with- 
out touching  his  hands  to  their  sides. 

"  He  came  to  manhood  in  those  stirring  times  preceding  the  Revolu- 
tion, when  the  air  was  full  of  the  spirit  of  liberty  and  the  new  idea  of 
the  rights  of  the  people  was  battling  with  the  old  idea  of  royalty  to  a  king. 
It  was  inevitable  that  he  should  hear  these  great  principles  fully  dis- 
cussed, for  if  one  may  judge  the  fathers  by  the  children,  reading 
heredity  backwards,  as  it  were,  I  know  that  quiet  household  was  stirred 
to  its  depths  by  the  unusual  excitement,  and  that  the  heroic  words  of 
Patrick  Henry  and  John  Adams  thrilled  those  boys  as  a  hundred  years 
later  their  descendants  were  thrilled  when  the  command  rang  out,  '  If 
anybody  attempts  to  tear  down  the  Flag  shoot  him  on  the  spot.' 

:>  Middletown  was  fully  in  sympathy  with  the  patriots  of  Boston  and 
had  sent  substantial  aid  to  that  beleaguered  town,  while  a  few  of  her 
citizens  had  fought  at  Lexington  and  Concord.  Fired  by  such  exam- 
ples it  was  only  natural  that  at  the  age  of  twenty-three  he  should  enlist 
in  the  Continental  army.  His  youngest  daughter  has  told  me  that  this 
enlistment  was  for  three  years,  but  the  Connecticut  Official  Records  has 
it,  '  For  the  war,'  from  which  it  appears  that  he  meant  to  fight  it  out 
to  the  end.  The  exact  date  of  enlistment  is  June  17th,  1776,  just  one 
year  after  the  battle  of  Bunker  Hill.  His  regiment  was  attached  to 
AVadsworth's  Brigade  and  was  until  October  stationed  at  Bergen 
Heights,  now  Jersey  City.  In  October  it  moved  up  the  river  near  Fort 
Lee,  then  under  General  Greene's  command.  In  November  it  was  sent 
to  assist  in  defending  Fort  Washington  and  on  the  fall  of  that  strong- 
hold was  captured  by  the  British. 

"  And  now,  if  never  before,  our  young  volunteer  learned  to  '  endure 
hardness  as  a  good  soldier.'  In  fact,  endurance  was  about  the  only  sol- 
dierly quality  called  out  by  the  new  circumstances  in  which  he  found 
himself.  It  would  tax  our  credulity  to  believe  all  that  is  told  of  the 
treatment  of  these  prisoners  of  war  did  we  not  remember  Libby,  Belle 
Isle  and  Andersonville.  Thrust  into  the  crowded  hold  of  the  old  prison 
ship  Jersey,  where  a  thousand  men  suffered  and  died,  robbed  of 
the  barest  necessities  of  life  they  became  so  desperate  that  an  armed 
guard  was  necessary  to  compel  them  to  man  the  pumps  and  keep  their 


2  SO 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


horrible  prison  afloat.  Transferred  after  a  time  to  the  old  Sugar 
House  in  New  York,  they  gained  a  little  comfort  perhaps  by  their 
larger  quarters,  though  the  cruelty  of  their  treatment  in  no  way  dimin- 
ished. Their  food  was  scanty  and  unfit  to  eat,  their  clothing  hung  in 
rags,  and  weakened  by  cold  and  hunger  it  was  not  strange  that  disease 
found  them  an  easy  prey,  or  that  despair — that  sure  precursor  of  death — 
should  settle  like  a  pall  over  them.  On  one  occasion  a  number  of  hal- 
ters was  offered  them  from  which  each  man  was  bidden  to  choose  one 
wherewith  to  be  hanged.  Under  these  circumstances  the  man  who 
coitld  raise  a  laugh  was  a  public  benefactor,  and  our  soldier  had  his  own 
way  of  doing  it.  Their  prison  was  on  the  second  floor,  from  which  a 
broad  staircase  led  clown  to  the  door  below.  Back  and  forth  at  the  foot 
of  this  staircase  paced  the  guard  ready  to  shoot  any  desperate  man  who 
might  be  tempted  to  make  a  rush  for  the  liberty  beyond  that  door. 
Watching  his  opportunity  when  the  sentry  was  at  the  further  end  of  his 
beat  this  undaunted  prisoner  would  rush  half  way  down  the  stairs 
shouting  at  the  top  of  his  voice,  '  Damn  King  George!'  and  then  fly 
back  again  before  the  angry  sentinel  could  fire.  Often  was  the  musket 
levelled  at  his  head,  but  he  always  managed  to  mix  with  the  crowd  in 
time  to  save  himself  and  enjoy  the  laugh  his  sally  had  raised.  But  he 
was  capable  of  other  moods  than  merriment,  and  on  one  occasion  when 
a  dying  comrade  was  about  to  be  dragged  out  by  a  heartless  British 
officer  he  rushed  to  the  rescue,  stood  between  the  dying  man  and  his 
tormentor,  vowing  that  he  should  be  allowed  to  breathe  his  last  among 
friends.  For  this  he  narrowly  escaped  the  bayonet  in  the  hands  of 
the  angry  Englishman,  who  may  well  have  smarted  under  the  hot  in- 
dignation of  his  prisoner's  words.  It  is  easy  to  understand  how  one  who 
knew  him  well  in  after  life  should  say,  '  He  never  counted  danger  till  it 
was  past.' 

"  The  weary  captivity  came  to  an  end  at  last  through  an  exchange  of 
prisoners,  and  a  day  arrived  when  their  last  meal  served  by  British 
hands  was  before  them,  i,  c,  hot  bread  fresh  from  the  baker's  oven  It  was 
scarcely  safer  than  poison  for  those  starved  men,  and  one  soldier  had 
enough  self-control  to  refuse  a  morsel,  though  every  fibre  of  his  body 
cried  out  for  food.  He  earnestly  entreated  his  comrades  to  deny  them- 
selves the  dangerous  indulgence,  but  for  many  the  temptation  was  too 
strong,  and  some  of  their  number  died  in  the  very  hour  of  release. 

"  His  last  act  before  leaving  the  prison  was  to  kneel  beside  a  dying 
comrade,  receive  his  last  message  for  home,  and  then  close  his  eyes 
and  wrap  his  emaciated  body  in  his  tattered  blanket  for  burial.  He 
lingered  so  long  that  the  officer  in  charge  came  back  and  hurried  him 
away  to  join  his  companions.     One  would  think  he  had  had  enough  of 


OLD  HOMESTEADS.  351 

war  by  this  time  and  might  plead  with  a  clear  conscience  that  he  had 
done  his  full  duty  to  his  country;  but  we  find  him  the  next  year  vol- 
unteering for  the  '  Continental  Line,'  which  was  recruited  throughout 
Connecticut,  and  was  ordered  late  in  the  Fall  to  join  Washington's 
army  in  Pennsylvania.  Following  this  was  a  winter  at  Valley  Forge, 
where,  to  quote  Mrs.  Stowe,  '  The  American  soldiers  went  on  the  snow 
with  bleeding  feet  and  had  scarce  anything  for  daily  bread  except  a 
morning  message  of  hope  and  patriotism  from  George  Washington.' 
This  second  term  of  service  lasted  a  year  and  a  half,  and  still  later  he 
enlisted  for  a  brief  campaign  in  defense  of  the  sea-coast  towns  of  his 
native  State  against  a  threatened  British  invasion. 

"The  war  over  at  last  he  came  home  to  enjoy  his  well  earned  liberty. 
His  four  brothers  had  all  served  in  the  army  in  some  capacity,  one  as 
State  Commissary,  two  as  teamsters  and  one,  like  himself,  in  the  ranks. 
This  last  had  given,  not  life,  but  liberty  to  his  country's  cause,  for  a 
severe  cold  contracted  on  his  journey  home  had  resulted  in  brain  fever, 
and  though  he  recovered  and  lived  for  forty  years  he  was  never  there- 
after a  sane  man.  The  three  older  brothers  soon  married,  the  elder 
receiving  a  portion  of  his  father's  farm  and  building  thereon  the  house 
now  occupied  by  A.  M.  Colgrove.  A  few  years  later  he  removed  to  the 
fertile  lands  of  Central  New  York,  from  which  came  back  in  time  a 
homesick  wail  to  the  effect  that  he  never  regretted  leaving  New  Eng- 
land but  once  and  that  was — always.  Another  brother  became  a  car- 
penter and  built  for  himself  the  small  house  upon  which  the  Old  First 
Church  meeting  house  was  afterward  grafted,  and  which  has  figured 
since  as  school  house,  boarding  house  and  Home  for  Aged  Women. 
Still  another  built  and  for  many  years  occupied  the  house  now  owned 
by  the  heirs  of  the  late  S.  L.  Warner. 

"  So  it  was  left  to  our  hero  to  remain  at  home  and  care  for  father  and 
mother  and  the  poor  elemented  brother  for  whom  no  friendly  asylum 
could  open  its  doors.  Soon  he  took  to  wife  the  sister  of  a  comrade  in 
arms,  giving  one  of  his  own  in  exchange,  and  settled  down  in  the  home 
of  his  childhood  to  repeat  in  his  own  family  the  homely  hard  working 
life  of  his  ancestors. 

"  Nine  children  grew  to  maturity  around  his  hearthstone,  and  again 
the  old  house  hummed  like  a  hive  with  its  busy  industry.  The  promise 
of  good  citizenship  made  by  the  early  years  of  his  life  was  not  broken 
in  manhood,  and  the  same  spirit  of  fidelity  to  duty  which  sent  him  into 
the  army  kept  him  true  to  his  obligations  at  home.  When  a  new 
meeting  house  was  resolved  upon  his  gift  towards  the  enterprise  (a 
large  stick  of  timber)  was  the  first  upon  the  ground,  and  when  the 
building  was  completed  his  own  little  daughter  was  the  first  child  bap- 


252 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 


tized  in  it.  As  his  sons  grew  to  manhood  the  same  roving  instinct  that 
brought  his  ancestor  from  his  English  home  sent  two  of  them  to  the 
West  and  in  the  next  generation  sent  '  Forty-niners  '  to  California  and 
Free  State  pioneers  to  Kansas.  Five  grandsons  did  valiant  service  in 
the  Civil  War  to. preserve  the  Union  he  helped  to  found,  and  two  laid 
down  their  lives  in  its  defense.  But  long  before  this  one  veteran  well 
past  his  fourscore  years  had  answered  the  last  roll  call  and  was  at  rest. 
No  one  of  his  descendants  but  is  proud  of  the  memory  of  this  common 
soldier  who  did  what  he  could  to  make  this  fair  land  free  and  inde- 
pendent." 


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Old  Homestead  of  Hon.  Samuel  Dickinson  Hubbard 

OF    MlDDLETOWN,  Ct. 


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Old  Philip   Hubbard  Garrison  House  at  Kittery,    Me. 

(Furnished  by  Mrs.  Olive  Elizabeth  Noyes  of  South  Berwick,  Me.) 


Old_Hubbard  Homestead  at  Holmdel,  Monmouth  County,  N.J. 

(burnished  by  Mrs.  Annie  (Chester*)  Hae-er  of  New  York  City. 


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Two  Views  of  the   Old   Nehemiah   Hubbard   Homestead   at 
Long   Hill,  near  Middletown,    Ct. 

(Furnished  by  Mrs.  Mary  Anna  (Hubbard)  Bunce  of  Middletown,  Ct.) 


254 


We  ought  to  venerate  all  truly  good  men  while  living,  and  to  revere  their  memories  when  they 
are  dLea.A— George  Crabb 


(Copied  from  town  and  family  records  at  Guilford,  Ct.) 

DANIEL  HUBBARD,  third  son  of  George  and  Mary  (Bishop)  Hub- 
bard, was  born  in  Milford,  Ct.,  and  baptized  there  May  26, 1644.  He 
removed  with  his  parents  to  Guilford,  Ct.,  in  1648,  and  died  there  in  1 720; 
he  married  Nov  17,  1664,  Elizabeth  Jordan,  related  to  Mary,  Thomas, 
and  John  Jordan  of  that  place,  children  of  James  Jordan  of  Dedham, 
Mass.,  who  died  there  Mch  29,  1655,  and  who  came  from  Kent,  Eng.  The 
patent  of  Guilford  was  granted  by  the  Governor  and  Council  Dec  7, 
1695,  to  "  Sergt.  Daniel  Hubbard  and  eleven  others."  Children — Daniel 
(see  following),  Elizabeth  (b  1666,  d  Mch  29,  1735,  m  David  Buck), 
Abigail  (b  Mch  1,  1671,  d  June  28,  1740,  m  Joseph  Dudley,  b  June  11, 
1671,  d  Feb  22,  1726,  son  Joseph  and  Ann  (Robinson)  Dudley),  Eben- 
ezer  (b  Aug  18,  1673,  d  in  Guilford  Oct  5,  17 14,  m  Elizabeth  Lord  and 
had  Ebeneser,  b  Aug  27,  17 10,  d  1720;  Dorothy,  b  Feb  19, 17 13,  d  Aug  13, 
1 7 13:  Mercy,  b  Nov  21,  17 14,  m  Isaac  Cook;  and  George,h  May  30,  17 17, 
d  Nov,  1762),  Mary  (b  Feb,  1676,  d  Nov  10,  1775,  m  Caleb  Leete,  b  Dec 
10,  1673,  d  Dec  3,  1760,  son  of  Hon.  Andrew  and  Elizabeth  (Jordan) 
Leete  of  Guilford  and  grandson  of  Gov.  William  and  Anna  (Payne) 
Leete.  Gov  Leete  had  also  wives  (2)  Sarah  Rutherford  and  (3)  widow 
Mary  (Hay)  Newman),  John  (b  Nov  17,  1677,111  Sarah  Tyrrell  and  lived 
in  New  Haven  and  Wallingford,  Ct.;  estate  administered  upon  by  his 
widow  Oct  2,  1 7 12;  inventory  ^56.  15.  02.). 

DANIEL,  eldest  child  of  Daniel  and  Elizabeth  (Jordan)  Hubbard, 
was  born  Aug  1,  1666,  in  Guilford,  farmer,  married  Dec  5,  1691,  Eliza- 
beth Cruttenden,  b  Sep  22,  1670,  dau  Isaac  and  Lydia  (Thompson) 
Cruttenden  of  Guilford— and  died  there   in    Mch,  1702,   "by  suicide." 

255 


256  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Children — Elizabeth  (b  Sep  6,  1692,  d  y),  Elizabeth  (b  Jan  31,  1694,  d 
Mch  7,  1770,  m  Abraham  Fowler,  b  1683,  d  Oct  11,  1754,  son  of  Abraham 
and  Elizabeth  (Bartlett)  Fowler  of  Guilford),  Abraham  (b  Jan  3,  1701, 
d  July  12,  17 14),  N1  Daniel  (see  elsewhere)  and  (J1  John  (see  elsewhere). 
fli  DANIEL,  third  child  of  Daniel  and  Elizabeth  (Cruttenden)  Hub- 
bard, was  born  Feb  7,  1697,  in  Guilford,  and  died  there  Sep  28,  1751;  he 
married  Apl  16,  1728,  (1)  Thankful  Stone — b  June  25,  1710,  d  Aug  13, 
1729 — dau  "William  Stone  of  Guilford  and  Sarah  Hatch  of  Falmouth, 
Mass.;  m  Oct  13,  1730,  (2)  Diana  Ward — b  Feb  11,  1710,  d  Mch  29,  17S9 — 
dau  Capt  Andrew  and  Deborah  (?  Jacobs  or  Joy)  Ward  of  Guilford;  she 
m  1754  Capt  Nathaniel  Johnson.  This  Daniel  Hubbard  was  called 
"  Lieut."  in  official  documents,  and  was  an  immensely  wealthy  man  ac- 
cording to  the  Guilford  probate  records.  Accompanying  is  a.fac  simile 
of  his  signature: 


His  estate  was  inventoried  by  his  widow,  Diana,  sole  executrix,  Jan 

29,  1752,  and  showed  a  valuation  of  ^19,772.  195-.  6d.  To  which  was 
added  later  a  second  inventory  of  ^614.  i$s.t  making  a  total  of  over 
^£20,000,  During  the  Revolutionary  War  the  estate  was  greatly  dis- 
sipated. Children — Daniel  (b  June  24,  1729,  d  July  17,  1729),  Diana  (b 
Jan  14,  1723,  d  Feb  7,  1798,  m  Gen.  Andrew  Ward,  b  Nov  19,  1727,  d  Jan 
10,  1799,  son  Col.  Andrew  and  Elizabeth  (Fowler)  Ward  of  Guilford), 
Thankful  (b  Apl  8,  1742,  d  Jan  17,  1809,  m  Asher  Fairchild — b  Aug  16, 
1734,  d  Aug,  1794 — son  Samuel  and  Phebe  Fairchild  of  Durham,  Ct.,  and 
had  Lavinia,  Nancy,  Rebecca,  Harriet,  Grace,  Charlotte,  Hubbard,  Ward, 
and  Rebecca),  Levi  (b  Feb  10,  1736,  m  Anne  Gould,  lived  in  New  Haven, 
d  Aug  21,  1825,  and  had  William  Henry,  b  June  29,  1764,  d  y;  William 
Gould,  b  June  16,  1765,  Yale  1785,  d  in  New  Haven  Feb  18,  1848,  m 
Elizabeth  Douglas  and  had  Douglas,  Nancy,  Elizabeth,  Ann  and  Harry; 
Anna,  b  Nov  23,  1767,  d  Oct  8,  1773;  Henry,  b  1774,  Yale  1792,  d  June 

30,  1794;  Nancy,  b  1776,  m  George  Wadsworth ;  and  Rugglcs,  b  177S, 
Yale  1796,  d  181 7),  Bela,  Rev  (see  Prominent  American  Hubbards  for 
descendants — also  Thomas  Hill  Hubbard),  and  Daniel  (b  July  25,  1731, 
d  in  Guilford  Apl  5,  1765,  m  Deborah  Hopson — b  Oct  22,  1736,  d  Mch 
19,  1819 — dau  John  and  Deborah  (Bartlett)  Hopson  of  Guilford,  and  had 
Deborah,  b  Aug  1,  1758,  d  Sep  23,  1759;  Deborah,  b  Dec  13,  1759,  d  Feb 
8,  1831,  m  Jan  15,  1781,  John  Bartlett,  b  Jan  18,  1757,  d  in  Richmond, 
Mass.,  June  18,  1797,  and  had  Hubbard,  John,  Harvey  and  Samuel; 
Daniel,  b  Dec  4,  1762,  d  in  Guilford  Jan  7,  1839,  m  Hannah  Fowler — b 
Dec  3,  1765,  d  June  22,  1861,  dau  Andrew  and  Martha  (Stone)  Fowler, 
and  had  fl2  Daniel  (see  elsewhere);  Anne,  b  Nov  27,  1791,  d  unm  May 
14,  1883;  Betsey,  b  Mch  3,  1794,  d  unm  Jan  7,  1882;  Hannah,  b  Feb  16, 


DANIEL  HUBBARD  AND  ELIZABETH  JORDAN.      2^ 

1798,  d  Dec  24,  iS5i,m  Sep  19,  1824,  (1)  Timothy  Stone,  b  June  1,  1793,  d 
Dec  2, 1824,  childless,  m  (2)  William  Elliott;  and  fl3  John  (see  elsewhere); 
William,  b  Jan  15,  1765,  d  Aug  14,  1840,  lived  in  Westmoreland,  X.  V.,  m 
Sep  30,  1790,  Mary  Landon,  d  Sep  20,  1S43,  dau  Jared  and  Martha 
(Hutchinson)  Landon  of  Southold,  L.  I.,  and  had  William,  b  1793,  lived 
in  Clinton,  N.  Y.,  m  Emily  Angell  and  had  Emily,  Mary,  Sophia,  Wil- 
liam, Samuel,  Thomas  and  Josephine;  Samuel  Landon,  b  Oct  9,  1795, 
lived  in  Elmira,  N.  Y.,  m  Sarah  Burgess;  Nancy,  b  July  28,  1800,  m 
William  Richmond;  Jared  Hutchinson,  b  June  23,  1803,  rem  to  Iowa,  m 
Cornelia  Larrabee  and  had  Elizabeth,  Louisa,  James,  and  William). 

SONS    OF    DANIEL    AND    HANNAH    (FOWLER)     HUBBARD. 

N*  DANIEL— b  in  Guilford,  Ct.,  Dec  19,  1799,  d  there  Dec  28,  1873,  m 
May  8, 1828,  (1)  Susan  Russell,  b  Oct  31,  1803,  d  June  30,  1845,  dau  Augus- 
tus and  Lydia  (Rose)  Russell;  m  Sep  27,  1847,  (2)  widow  Abigail  Fris- 
bie,  dau  Daniel  and  Laura  (Frisbie)  Goldsmith  of  Branford.  Children 
(by  Susan  Russell) — Daniel  Russell  (b  Apl  26,  1830,  lives  in  Guilford), 
John  Henry  (b  Sep  11,  1832,  d  Mch  16,  1837),  James  (b  Dec  25,  1836,  d 
Feb  6,  1837),  George  Henry  (b  Mch  31,  1838,  lived  in  Newark,  N.  J.,  d 
Sep,  1888,  m  June  14,  187 1,  Emily  S.  Ball,  b  Nov  5,  1846,  who  lives  in 
Guilford,  dau  Charles  and  Emily  (Chittenden)  Ball,  and  had  Daniel 
Ball,  b  July  14,  1S76),  Mary  Jane  (b  Aug  2,  1842,  unm).  Children  (by 
Abigail  (Goldsmith)  Frisbie) — Samuel  Goldsmith  (b  Jan  28,  1852,1mm, 
lives  in  Guilford),  and  Ida  Gertrude  (b  Aug  30,  1855,  lives  in  Guilford). 

N:j  JOHN — b  in  Guilford  Sep  11,  1804,  d  there  May  9,  1891,  a  prosper- 
ous and  enterprising  farmer  and  high  authority  on  cattle,  m  Nov  26, 
1835,  (1)  Mary  Linsley,  b  Aug,  1809,  d  Nov  16,  1S37,  dau  Chauncey  and 
Parnell  (Gorham)  Linsley  of  North  Branford.  Children  (by  Mary 
Linsley) — Mary  Linsley  (b  Nov  2,  1837,  lives  on  the  old  "  home-lot  " 
bought  by  George  Hubbard  Sep  22,  1648,  from  Jacob  Sheafe,  and  is  a 
member  of  the  Protestant  Episcopal  Church  of  Guilford).  JOHN 
HUBBARD  m  Dec  10,  1838  (2)  Charlotte  Rose,  b  May  20,  1807,  d  Feb 
20,  1883,  dau  Jonathan  and  Hannah  (Fowler)  Rose  of  North  Branford. 
Children  (by  Charlotte  Rose) — Hannah  Jane  (b  Jan  8,  1840,  d  Aug  7, 
1885,  m  Christopher  Spencer  Foote,  b  May  2,  1S37,  d  May  29,  1S80,  son 
George  and  Eliza  (Spencer)  Foote  of  Guilford,  and  had  Robert  Elliot  I, 
b  Aug  31,  1866;  George  Augustus,  b  Oct  8,  1S71,  d  Aug  30,  1872;  Mary, 
b  Nov  25,  1872;  Henry  Ward,  b  Mch  31,  1S75;  and  Margaret  Spencer,  b 
June  12,  1880,  adopted  by  Senator  Joseph  Hawley  of  Hartford,  Ct.), 
William  Henry  (b  Aug  17,  1841,  d  unm  Sep  16,  1863,  of  diphtheria,  at 
Portsmouth,  Va.,  while  in  the  service  of  his  country,  a  sergeant  of  Co. 
B,  16th  Conn  Vols,  enl  Aug  24,  1S62),  Ellln  Maria  (b  Mch  13,  1S43,  d 


25§ 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 


unm  Apl  30,  1890),  James  Rose  (b  Apl  26,  1845,  d  unm  Apl  5,  1878),  and 
John  Bartlett  (b  Feb  3,  1847,  an  enterprising-  and  progressive  farmer 
of  Guilford,  lives  at  the  old  George  Hubbard  homestead;  he  m  July  3, 
1873,  (1)  Elvira  Henrietta  Palmer,  b  Mch  29,  1846,  d  Aug  4,  1875,  and 
had  Ellen  Charlotte,  b  Apl  29,  1874;  he  m  June  23,  1881,  (2)  Eva  Bald- 
win Goldsmith,  dau  James  Daniel  and  Gertrude  (Baldwin)  Goldsmith  of 
Moose  Hill,  Ct.,  and  had  Mabel  Carpenter,  b  Aug  14,  18S4;  James  Rose, 
b  Aug  17,  1886,  and  William  Goldsmith,  b  Aug  5,  1890). 

01  JOHN,  fourth  child  of  Daniel  and  Elizabeth  (Cruttenden)  Hub- 
bard, was  born  May  20,  1699,  d  in  Guilford  Nov  11,  1775,111  June  13, 
1721  (1)  Patience  Chittenden — b  Jan  19,  1696,  d  June  6,  1769 — dau  Joseph 
and  Mary  (Kimberly)  Chittenden  of  Guilford.  Children — Dinah  (b  Oct 
12,  1722,  d  y),  John  (b  July  21,  1723,  d  Mch  25,  1781,  m  (1)  Zoniah  Stone 
and  (2)  Mary  Rose),  Elizabeth  (b  Jan  5,  1728,  d  Feb  21,  1813,  m  John 
Davis),  Rachel  (b  Oct  30,  1731,  m  Timothy  Watrous),  Leah  (b  Dec  18, 
1735,  d  unm  July  12,  1761),  Zadoc  (b  Apl  12,  1738,  d  unm  Sep  30,  1780), 
Dinah  (b  abt  1740,  d  unm  Nov  23,  1786),  Eber  (b  Nov  19,  1733,  d  Apl 
22,  1S0S,  111  Dec  28,  1763  (1)  Jerusha  Fowler — b  Nov  20,  1731,  d  Jan  1, 
1 781 — dau  John  and  Abigail  (Hall)  Fowler,  (2)  widow  Olive  (Judd) 
Barnes,  d  Oct  27,  1786,  and  (3)  Jerusha  Tyler— d  Jan  28,  1839— and  had 
John,  b  Oct  13,  1764,  rem  to  Hamilton,  N.  Y.,  m  Amy  Wicks;  \tf  Eber 
(see  elsewhere),  Jerusha,  111  Samuel  Rogers;  O3  Timothy  (see  else- 
where); Pa  tie  nee,  m  Samuel  Hart,  04  Solomon  (see  elsewhere);  Abigail, 
b  17S0;  Zadoc,  b  1 781,  drowned  May  13,  1802;  and  Olive,  b  1783),  and 
Abraham  (b  June  8,  1729,  lived  in  Guilford,  and  died  there  Mch  9,  1804, 
m  June  6,  1763,  Hannah  Hodges  of  Long  Island  and  had  Hannah,  b 
Feb  21,  1764,  m  Daniel  Hart;  Abraham,  b  Mch  8,  1766,  d  Feb  24,  1800, 
m  Rachel  Scranton — b  1770,  d  Feb  22,  1826 — dau  Nathan  and  widow 
Mary  (Field)  Scranton  of  Springfield,  Mass,  and  had  Joel,  b  1788,  d  1840, 
m  Joanna  Stevens  and  rem  to  Orion,  Mich,  and  had  Alanson,  Henry, 
Alfred,  William,  Joanna  and  Palmyra;  Rachel,  b  Mch  29,  1790,  111  Jere- 
miah Newton;  Sarah,  b  June  12,  1792,  m  Deacon  Amos  Seward;  Mary, 
b  July,  1794,  m  John  Hamilton;  and  James,  b  July,  1796,  rem  to  Ky; 
Elizabeth,  b  Oct  25,  1769,  m  James  Elwell;  Samuel,  b  Aug  1,  1774,  d 
Aug  4,  1846,111  Dec  20,  1802  (1)  Eunice  Bartlett,b  Jan  16,  1777,  d  June  27, 
1S24,  dau  Deacon  John  and  Lois  (Chidsey)  Bartlett,  (2)  Amanda  Hall — 
b  Oct  6,  1797,  d  Aug  13,  1837 — dau  Benjamin  and  Beulah  (Fowler)  Hall, 
and  (3)  Mary  Bishop — b  June  20,  181 1 — dau  Jonathan  Chittenden  and 
Lydia  (Tyler)  Bishop  (she  111  2d  Bela  Hubbard),  and  had  Abraham,  b 
Nov  5,  1803,  d  July  1,  1885;  111  Clarrissa  Soper;  Laura,  b  Oct  3,  1805,  d 
Apl  24,  1835;  m  Lucius  Foote;  Daniel,  b  Aug  10,  1807,  d  Mch  1,  1884, 
m   Orra  Hubbard,  dau  Jeremiah  and  Parnell  (Kimberley)   Hubbard; 


DANIEL  HUBBARD  AND  ELIZABETH  JORDAN.     259 

William,  b  1810,  m  Angeline  Hatch;  Lois,  b  Mch  30,  1817,  m  Lucius 
Foote;  Ruth,  b  Julv  21,  1828,  d  May  30,  1832;  and  Elizabeth,  b  June  1  1, 
1831,  d  Sep  18,  1834;  Ruth,  b  May  26,  1772,  m  Deacon  Ebenezer  Hotch- 
kiss;  Temperance,  b  1777,  ra  Warren  Bebee;  ^>  Jeremiah  (see elsewhere), 
and  William  Hodges,  b  Sep  15,  17S3,  d  May  23,  1865,  bequeathed  $10,000 
to  Guilford  Episcopal  Church,  m  July  7,  1805,  (1)  Rebecca  Fairchild — b 
Mch  17,  1787,  d  Mch  9,  181 1 — dan  Asher  and  Thankful  (Hubbard)  Fair- 
child  of  Guilford,  and  (2)  Anne  Phillips  of  Sidney,  Mass,  rem  to  Rich- 
mond, Va,  and  had  George  Augustus,  b  June  4,  1806,  d  Feb  14,  1809, 
and  Anne). 

SOXS    OF    EBER    AM)    JERUSHA    (FOWLER)     HUBBARD. 

0"  EBER— b  Feb  3,  1776,  lived  in  North  Guilford,  d  Feb  9,  1847,  m 
Apl  7,  1794,  Selina  Tyler,  b  July  10,  1767,  d  Jan  1,  1885.  Children — 
Cynthia  (b  Mch  29,  1795,  d  imm  ^ll§'  T7>  l870>  Julia  (b  Jan  1,  1797,  d 
Sep  20,  1881),  Horace  (b  Nov  29,  1798,  drowned  June  3,  1S1 7),  Grove 
(b  Oct  16,  1800,  d  childless  Nov  17,  1869,  m  (1)  Elvea  Silby,  (2)  Maria 
Foster),  Frederic  (b  Feb  15,  1803,  d  Oct  27,  1867,  m  Apl  28,  1836, 
Mary   Harrison),  Bela   (b  Mch   22,  1805,  d  Jan  23,   1869,111  (1)  widow 

Mary  (Bishop)  Hubbard  and  (2) Frisbie),  Harry  (b  Apl  18,  1807, 

d  unm  Apl  19,  1876),  and  Joseph  (b  Sep  11,  1809,  d  July  7,  lS69>  m  °ct 
26,  1S46,  Harriet  Ellen  Fowler  (who  m  2d,  Russell  Frisbie),  b  July  29 
1 81 9,  dau  Richard  and  Belinda  (Ford)  Fowler  of  North  Branford,  and 
had  Sarah  Ophelia,  b  Aug  28,  185 1,  m  Kidder  Hoadley). 

03  TIMOTHY— b  1769,  d  in  North  Guilford  Apl  26,  1844,  m  May  27, 
1797,  Martha  Rogers,  b  1769,  d  June  20,  1S44,  in  North  Guilford.  Chil- 
dren— Harvey  (b  Mch  18,  1798,  d  Aug  10,  18S4,  m  June  10,  1827,  Sa- 
mantha  Fowler,  b  Aug  15,  1801,  d  June  18,  1879,  dau  David  S.  and  Sally 
(Benton)  Fowler,  and  had  Ann,  b  Mch  3,  1828,  d  Apl  17,  1887,111  Andrew 
Jackson;  William,  b  Sep  7,  1S30,  d  Apl  25,  1S39;  and  (>)  Samuel  Fowler, 
b  July  8,  1S39,  m  Maria  C.  Avers  of  East  Haddam  and  had  Orlando 
Norris,  b  Aug,  1868;  Margaret  and  Nathan,  twins,  b  Mch  30,  1873,  and 
Ernest  Latimer,  b  Oct  30,  1S64,  m  Dec  31,  1885,  Hattie  Dudley),  Samuel 
Fowler  (b  Aug,  1799,  d  unm  Sep  8,  1878),  Levi  (b  1S01,  d  Aug  30, 
1S04),  Chauncey  (b  1803,  d  unm  Aug  15,  1836),  and  Levina  (b  1805,  d 
June  12,  1806). 

04  SOLOMON— b  1775,  d  in  North  Guilford  Oct  4,  1845.111  Louisa 
Cowles,  d  Dec  7,  1855.  Children— Henry  (b  1804,  m  Mary  Waterman 
and  had  Martin,  b  1849,  rem  to  Seattle,  Wash.,  and  Clark,  b  1S51), 
Laura  (b  1806,  111  Frederic  Clements),  Fanny  (b  [814,  d  y),  and  I 
oline  (b  1817,  m  Edwards  Farnsworth),  Lucy  (b  1825,  m  John  W. 
Childs  of  Augusta,  Mich.),  and  John  (b   1824.  rem  to  Augusta,  Mich.). 


260 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


SON    OF    ABRAHAM    AND    HANNAH    (HODGES)    HUBBARD. 

05  JEREMIAH— b  June  15,  1780,  d  in  North  Guilford  Sep  10,  1841, 
m  1804  (1)  Eunice  Winslow,  b  1776,  d  Jan  13,  1806,  and  had  David  H. 
(b  Dec,  1804,  rem  to  Richmond,  Mass);  he  m  Apl  13,  1806,  (2)  Parnell 
Kimberly,  b  Sep  1,  1772,  d  June  2,  1866,  and  had  Eunice  Cornelia  (b 
Jan  7,  1807,  d  Aug  18,  1853,  m  Horace  Fowler),  Hannah  Elizabeth  (b 
July  8,  1810,  d  Mch  11,  1873,  m  George  B.  Davis),  Rebecca  (b  Aug  31, 
1812,  dOct  12,  1848,  m  Charles  Bassett),  Orra  (b  Feb  n,  1S15,  d  Mch 
14,  1883,  m  Daniel  Hubbard),  Jared  Foote  (b  Mch  iS,  1S20,  d  Aug  7, 
1884,  m  Jane  Brown,  b  Aug  2,  1835,  dau  Merritt  Haven  Brown,  and  had 
William  Jared,  b  June  15,  1868,  m  Oct  n,  1888,  Hattie  Palmer;  Merritt 
Brown,  b  Nov  30,  1S68;  Daniel  Clifford,  b  Aug  26,  1870;  Ada  Miranda, 
b  Apl  18,  1893;  Herbert  Washington,  b  Nov  2,  1875;  and  Edith  Mary,  b 
Apl  29,  1878),  Parnell  Lucretia  (b  Oct  28,  1822,  d  Dec,  1861,  m  Fran- 
cis Welton),  and  Wealthy  Ann  (b  Aug  16,  1S25,  d  Dec  9,  1854,  m  Au- 
gustus S.  Hale). 


OLD    GEORGE    HUBBARD    HOMESTEAD 

At  Guilford,  Ct.    Built  in  1715-17. 
(Photographed  by  Phineas  Hubbard  of  Cambridge,  Mass.) 


Our  ancestry!    A  gallant,  Christian  race' 

Patterns  of  ev'ry  virtue,  ev'ry  grace — William  Coicper. 


A 


vS  the  child  is  the  father  of  the  man  so  is  the  mother  the  parent  of 
both.  From  her  blood,  bone  and  sinew,  equally  with  the  father, 
comes  those  complex  strains  in  nature  that  in  maturity  blossom  into 
qualities  we  all  delight  in  paying  homage  to — courage,  endurance,  per- 
severance and  integrity.  New  England  mothers  produced  daughters 
from  the  same  mold  she  yielded  sons.  It  is  not  enough  to  know  this  in 
the  abstract.  We  should  be  moved  by  a  timely  justice  to  prolong  her 
memory  also,  alongside  of  man's,  by  the  same  medium  of  stone  shaft 
or  statue,  the  master's  brush,  or  the  enduring  lines  of  the  prose  writer 
or  poet.  This  we  pretend  to  do,  but  are  a  little  tardy  about  it,  also  in- 
frequent in  occasion. 

It  was  a  New  England  woman  who  fought  two  years  in  the  Revolu- 
tionary War  in  a  Massachusetts  company  with  her  musket  in  hand 
before  her  sex  was  suspected.  It  was  a  New  England  woman  who  car- 
ried her  husband  upon  her  back  into  the  city  of  Quebec  during  Arnold's 
campaign  after  he  had  been  left  to  die  of  exhaustion.  It  was  a  New 
England  woman  who,  with  her  maid  and  a  young  boy,  killed  her  ten 
Indian  conquerors  in  an  early  Indian  war  in  Maine,  escaped,  and  lived 
many  years  afterward  to  relate  the  circumstance.  This  shows  that 
occasion  makes  the  u<oman  as  well  as  the  man. 

The  picture  of  these  old  ladies  is  a  good  type  of  what  was  the  composi- 
tion of  our  pioneer  woman,  is  most  pleasant  to  look  upon,  and  agreeable 
and  instructive  to  know  about;  and,  furthermore,  let  us  hope,  an  in- 
spiration in  the  fading  twilight  of  our  American  history  that  will  serve 
to  lead  us  gently  back  into  those  old-fashioned  channels  through  which 
flowed  the^streams  of  human  benevolence,  Christian  charity  and  pure 
godliness.  Not  that  these  good  and  noble  old  ladies  were  heroines  of 
261 


SIX    HUBBARD    SISTERS. 

(Descended  from   George  Hubbard  cf  Middletown,   Ct.) 


SIX  HUBBARD  SISTERS.  263 

Indian  or  British  Wars,  but  that  there  shines  in  their  characters  what 
called  out  that  heroism  that  in  their  sisters  crystallized  into  acts  of 
heroism  when  the  occasion  came. 

The  daughters  of  a  Revolutionary  soldier  and  a  mother  disciplined  in 
goodness  and  truth  they  naturally  inherited  the  prime  virtues  of  earth 
and  heaven;  they  were  deft  housekeepers,  intense  patriots,  fine  singers, 
good  Bible  and  English  scholars  and  full  of  vim  and  the  spirit  of  indus- 
try. In  their  countenances  we  see  intelligence,  determination  and  in- 
tegrity. Beneath  we  see  cheerfulness,  good  nature,  vivacity  and  wit. 
Every  year  until  past  the  age  of  seventy  they  met  in  annual  reunion, 
played  jokes  upon  each  other  and  sang  with  great  gusto  and  tremendous 
volume  the  songs  they  learned  at  the  singing-school  in  the  country 
school-house.  Each  one  took  her  musical  part,  and  when  the  Sapphic 
Ode  was  rendered  the  ceiling  would  nearly  crack  and  the  roof  slowly 
raise.  Here  is  the  first  verse  of  the  Sapphic  Ode  which  they  sang  with 
such  intense  unction: 

When  the  fierce  north  wind,  with  his  airy  forces, 

Rears  up  the  Baltic  to  a  foaming  fury; 

And  the  red  lightning,  with  a  storm  of  hail  comes  rushing  amain  down. 

How  the  poor  sailors  stand  amazed  and  tremble: 

While  the  hoarse  thunder,  like  a  bloody  trumpet. 

Roars  a  loud  onset  in  the  gaping  waters  quick  to  devour  them. 

In  the  refrain  Anna,  who  sang  in  a  low  key,  would  stop  long  enough 
to  say,  "  That's  base,  but  I  have  to  sing  it."  All  eventually  married  ex- 
cept Mary,  the  youngest,  and  all  lived  to  be  eighty  and  over,  while  three 
of  them  reached  ninety  and  more.  Their  aggregate  ages  amounted  to 
524  years,  8  months  and  7  days.  Martha  married  Uriah  Hayden  of 
Essex,  Ct.,  and  died  in  her  ninety-fourth  year;  Rebecca  married 
Chauncey  Wetmore  of  Middletown,  Ct.,  and  died  in  her  ninetieth  year; 
Anna  married  Augustus  Phillips  of  Ithaca,  N.  Y.,  and  died  in  her 
eighty-second  year;  Sarah  Sill  married  Josiah  Meigs  Hubbard  of  Mid- 
dletown, Ct.,  and  died  in  her  ninety-third  year;  Phebe  married  Seth  S. 
Hall  and  died  in  her  eighty-third  year;  and  Mary  died  unmarried  in  her 
ninety-third  year. 

In  proper  order  under  the  head  of  Descendants  of  George  Hubbard 
of  Middletown,  Ct.,  will  be  found  their  exact  ages  in  years,  months  and 
days.  May  the  shades  of  their  goodness  and  graciousness  fall  benignly 
upon  many  coming  generations. 


luanT Hubbard 


.Mbigail  Dudley 


Remember  the  relation  that  bindeth  you  to  unity,  and  prefer  not  a  stranger  to  thine  own  kin— 

Robert  Dodsley. 


(The  following  dates  are  only  approximately  correct.     The  compiler  has  been  unable  to  obtain 
family  records  from  descendants  of  this  line.) 

WILLIAM  HUBBARD,  youngest  son  of  George  and  Mary  (Bishop) 
Hubbard,  was  born  in  1642  in  Connecticut  (probably  Milford). 
He  married  Abigail  Dudley  and  removed  to  Greenwich,  Ct.,  before 
1664.  He  owned  land  there  in  1667,  and  prior  to  1672  bought  "  Miose- 
hasseky  "  of  the  Indians  in  common  with  26  others.  They  were  styled 
the  "  27  proprietors  of  1672,"  and  called  their  tract  Horseneck  and  later 
West  Greenwich.  This  is  where  Gen.  Israel  Putnam  made  his  famous  leap 
with  his  horse,  though  the  name  was  imposed  because  of  the  shape  of 
the  tract,  which  jutted  out  like  a  neck  far  into  the  sound  and  was  a 
famous  public  horse  pasture. 

Between  1664  and  1750  mention  is  made  of  the  name  "  William  Hub- 
bard "  ten  times  in  the  land  records  there,  meaning  sometimes  the 
father  and  sometimes  the  son.  It  is  thought  WILLIAM  afterward  re- 
moved  to    Stamford,    where   he    died    in    1684.*     Children— Abigail, 

His  signature  in  fac  simile.  \A^i2l£^(b$- 

George,  William  and  possibly  others.  Of  Abigail  (b  1670)  nothing  is 
known.  George  continued  to  live  in  Greenwich,  where  he  was  born  in 
1675  and  died  in  1688. *  He  is  mentioned  in  a  land  record  there  of  1684. 
There  are  no  further  traces  of  him  in  Greenwich,  though  at  a  later 
period  another  George  is  mentioned  seven  times  in  the  land  records, 

*Dr.  Alvan  Talcott's  records,  town  clerk's  office,  Guilford,  Ct. 
264 


WILLIAM  HUBBARD  AND  ABIGAIL  DUDLEY.       265 

also  John,  Abraham  and  Abraham  Jr.,  probably  sons   and  grandson  of 
his  brother  "William. 

WILLIAM,  Jr.,  supposed  eldest  son  of  William  and  Abigail  (Dudley) 
Hubbard,  was  born  about  1670  in  Stamford.  In  1697  he  bought  land 
there.  In  1704-5  he  bought  another  parcel  there  west  of  Mill  River  on 
Pepperwood  Ridge.  He  died  about  1723,  having  been  married  to  Han- 
nah Mead.  Children— Hannah  (b  abt  1694),  Daniel  (b  abt  1696;  in 
Greenwich  land  records  mention  is  made  in  1729  of  Daniel,  "son  of 
William,  Jr;"  no  other  traces  of  him),  Mary  (b  abt  1700),  Nathaniel 
(b  abt  1703,  in  Stamford,  physician,  m  Mary  Quintard  and  had  Henry, 
b  1747,  and  probably  others),  and  Abraham  (b  1705,  d  in  Greenwich  in 
1780,  m  Abigail  Rose  of  Guilford  and  had  Abraham  (see  following), 
William,  b  1731,  went  West;  Mary,  b  1733,  m  John  Filkins;  Abigail,  b 
1735;  Nathaniel,  b  1737;  and  another  child,  b  1739). 

ABRAHAM,  eldest  son  of  Abraham  and  Abigail  (Rose)  Hubbard, 
was  born  in  Greenwich  in  1729,  and  died  therein  1786.  He  married 
Sarah  Jenkins  of  Greenwich.  Children— Mary  (b  1757,  m  Abraham 
Close),  Nathaniel  (b  1755,  d  unm  1775),  Prudence  (b  1757,  m  David 
Reed),  and  Henry,  eldest  (b  1751,  m  abt  1771  (1)  Lydia  Dickson,  d  1784, 
and  had  Nathaniel,  b  1772,  m  Mary  McKay  of  Stamford  and  had  Archi- 
bald, b  1798;  Henry,  b  1S00,  d  1826;  Julia,  b  1802,  m  Lyman  Smith; 
Alexander,  b  1804;  Mary,  b  1806,  m  Henry  Lockwood;  John,  b  1807,  m 
Jane  Breasted;  George,  b  1810,  d  1881,  m  Hannah  June  and  had  Emily, 
George  and  Sarah;  Eleanor,  b  1812,  m  Nathaniel  Miller;  Sarah,  b  1815, 
m  Daniel  Lane;  Cornelia,  b  1817,  m  Augustus  Marshall;  William,  b 
1819,  m  widow  Caroline  (Daskam)  Smith;  and  Frances,  b  1S21,  m  Cyrus 
Han'non;  Andrei,',  b  1778,  lived  in  Greenwich,  m  Mary  Mead  and  had 
Mary,  b'l 801,  m  Samuel  Baylis;  Jane,  b  1804;  Azubah,  b  1805,  m  Walter 
Thompson;  Husted,  b  1809;  Anne,  b  1S11;  Dickson,  b  181 3;  Hannah,  b 
1816;  Harriet,  b  1818,  m  John  Colegrove;  Lott,  b  1822;  and  Allen, 
eldest,  b  1800,  lived  in  Greenwich,  m  Harriet  Schuermann  and  had 
Frederick,  b  1828,  d  in  New  York  1868,  m  Therese  Dohler  and  had  Har- 
riet, Albert,  Estelle,  Emily  and  Henry;  Sarah,  b  1780,  m  Levi  Inger- 
soll;  Gabriel,  b  1784,  d  in  Stamford,  m  abt  1S09  Hannah  Dibble  and  had 
Piatt,  b  1810;  Eleanor,  b  181 2;  Hannah,  b  1814;  George,  b  1816;  Eliza- 
beth,^ 1S1S;  Mary,  b  1820;  and  Samuel,  b  1822.  Henry  Hubbard 
then'  married  in  1785  (2)  Hannah  Smith  and  had  Lydia,  b  1786, 
died  in  Ohio,  m  John  Palmer;  Anne,  b  1789,  m  Jared  Reynolds;  John, 
b  1792  lived  in  Greenwich,  m  Sarah  Holly  and  had  Elmaretta,  b  1S1S, 
m  Lewis  Merrett;  Sarah,  b  1820,  m  Aaron  Heusted;  Holly,  b  1822,  m 
Mary  Johnson  and  had  Emily  and  Julian;  John,  b  1824,  m  Mary 
Heusted-  Henry  b  1797,  d  in  Greenwich   i860,  m  Sarah  W  eed  and  had 


266  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AXD   GENEALOGY. 

Henry,  b  1823,  who  m  Sarah  Wallace  and  had  William,  Sarah  and 
Isaac;'  and  Charles,  b  1S25;  Abraham,  b  1800,  d  in  New  York  City,  m 
(1)  Amy  Palmer,  (2)  Lydia  Lyon,  had  Ellen,  b  1S29,  m  Henry  Reed; 
and  Stephen,  b  1835,  m  Margaret  McFall  and  had  Albert;  Mary,  b  1 803, 
m  Stoddard  Frost;  Harvey,  b  1806,  d  1SS2  in  Akron,  Ohio,  m  (1)  Char- 
lotte Brown  in  1S36,  (2)  Helen  Edwards  in  1858,  (3)  Emily  Eglee,  and 
had  Emily,  b  1834,  m  Ransom  Ford;  Gillespie,  b  1840,  d  1863  in  army; 
Jerome,  b  1846,  m  Leonard  Groat;  Eugene,  b  1853;  Henry,  b  i860,  m 
Alice  Matthews  and  had  Maud,  Claudius,  Harry  and  Fred;  Cornelia,  b 
1862,  m  Charles  Washburn;  Frederica,  b  1864,  m  William  Jarrett; 
Charles, b  1866;  Mary,  b  1869;  and  George,  b  1875;  William,  b  1S11,  m 
Sarah  Brundage  of  Greenwich  and  had  Napoleon,  b  1838,  m  Delilah 
Martin  and  had  Joseph,  b  1869;  Mortimer,  b  1838;  Clarence,  b  1840; 
William,  b  1842,  m  Jennie  Brimlow  and  had  Mabel,  b  1872;  and  Alex- 
ander, b  1844,  m  Augusta  Knipe  and  had  Alexander,  b  1880,  and  Lester, 
b  1882). 


A  man  must  first  make  a  name,  and  the  monument  will  follow—  Plato. 


The  places  enumerated  below  were  named  after  Hubbards,  but  not  in  all  cases  could  the  historic 
name  be  ascertained. 

HUBARD,  Washing-ton  Co,  Ark.  Named  after  George  Hubbard,  of 
Neosho,  Mo. 

HUBBARD,  Buckingham  Co,  Va. 

HUBBARD,  Hardin  Co,  la. 

HUBBARD,  Randolph  Co,  Mo.     Named  after  William  H.  Hubbard. 

HUBBARD,  Dakota  Co,  Neb.  Named  after  Hon.  A.  W.  Hubbard. 
who  died  in   1879. 

HUBBARD,  Buckingham  Co,  N.  H.,  was  formerly  called  Deny  Sta- 
tion. It  is  situated  on  the  Manchester  &  Lawrence  Railway,  and  was 
named  after  J.  G.  Hubbard,  who  owned  land  upon  which  station  was 

built. 

HUBBARD,  Sawyer  Co,  Wis.      Named  in  1S88  after  C.  L.  Hubbard, 

Postmaster. 

HUBBARD,   Hill   Co,  Tex.      Named   after    Gov.    Richard    Bennet 

Hubbard. 

HUBBARD,  Trumbull  Co,  Ohio.  Named  after  Nehemiah  Hubbard, 
Middletown,  Ct,  though  he  never  resided  there.  1,500  acres  in  that 
township  were  granted  to  him  by  the  Connecticut  Land  Company. 

HUBBARD,  Hubbard  Co,  Minn.  Named  in  1881  after  Gov.  Lucius 
Frederick  Hubbard  (see  Prominent  American  Hubbard-). 

HUBBARD,  Marion  Co,  Ore.  Named  after  Charles  Hubbard,  owner 
of  "  Donation  Land  Claim." 

HUBBARD  LAKE,  Alpena  Co,  Mich. 

HUBBARD  SPRINGS,  Lee  Co,  Va. 
267 


268  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

HUBBARDSTON,  Wayne  Co,  West  Va.  Named  after  Edward  E. 
Hubbard,  of  Cincinnati,  Ohio,  who  with  others  established  a  mining 
company  there  about  1852. 

HUBBARDSTON,  Worcester  Co,  Mass.  Named  after  Hon.  Thomas 
Hubbard,  of  Boston  (see  Descendants  Richard  Hubbard,  Salisbury, 
Mass).  Tradition  says  that  in  appreciation  of  the  honor  of  adopting  his 
name  he  promised  to  pay  for  the  window  panes  of  the  first  meeting- 
house; consequently,  large  and  numerous  window-frames  were  inserted, 
which  the  worthy  citizens  had  afterward  to  glaze  themselves,  as  Thomas 
Hubbard  died  before  the  church  was  completed. 

HUBBARDSVILLE,  Madison  Co,  N.  Y.  Named  after  Calvin  Hub- 
bard, who  settled  there  in  a  wilderness  in  1813  and  made  it  "  blossom  as 
a  rose."  He  was  son  of  a  Jonathan  Hubbard,  who  left  Northampton, 
Mass,  and  settled  in  Winfield,  Herkimer  Co,  N.  Y.,  with  his  six  sons 
about  1796.  Calvin  was  an  upright  citizen  and  staunch  Whig.  He  died 
May  17,  1876,  aged  92  years  and  3  months,  leaving  no  sons. 

HUBBARDSVILLE,  a  suburb  of  Concord,  Mass.,  and  HUBBARD 
STREET  of  Concord,  were  named  after  early  families  who  settled 
thickly  in  those  localities. 

HUBBARDSTOWN,  York  Co,  Me.,  was  named  after  the  numerous 
Hubbard  families  of  the  Philip  Hubbard  line  who  settled  there  about 
the  middle  of  the  eighteenth  century.  The  first  settlers  were  Aaron, 
Richard  and  Jonathan.  The  place  is  now  called  Shapleigh,  a  part  of 
which  became  Acton  which  contains  a  settlement  called  HUBBARD'S 
CORNERS. 

HUBBARDTON,  Rutland  Co,  Vt. 

HUBBARDSTON,  Iona  Co,  Mich.  Named  after  Thomas  Hubbard, 
who  was  born  in  Brimfield,  Mass,  about  1801. 

HUBBARD  STREET,  Middletown,  Ct.  Named  after  Hon.  Samuel 
Dickinson  Hubbard,  a  member  of  President  Fillmore's  Cabinet,  and  de- 
scended from  George  Hubbard,  of  Middletown,  Ct. 

HUBBARD  STREET,  Boston,  Mass.:  also  HUBBARD  TERRACE. 

HUBBARD  AVENUE,  Cambridge,  Mass.;  also  HUBBARD  PARK. 

HUBBARD'S  CORNERS,  Sherman,  Chautauqua  County,  N.  Y. 


Oh'    Could  we  from  that  unknown  land  bring  spirits  to  our  aid. 

And  subsidize  the  angel  band,  the  heavenly  courts  invade. 

These  sombre  clouds,  which  now  conceal  our  ancestors  from  s  ght 

Would  vanish,  and  their  forms  reveal  fresh  from  the  realms  of  W^ 


^  v.     nvnnnv  ttprrarD'S  descendants  that  he  was  the  son  of 
It  has  been  generally  believed  by  GEORGE  "LBBARD     ^  Massachusetts  to  Connect!- 

George  Hubbard  of  Wethersfield,  both  ^^^9^^^^^  statement,  the  corn- 
cut  at  the  same  time  There  being  no  posiUye ^denje^ ^X^nealogists,  gave  his  birth 
piler  is  disinclined  to  accept  it.  Edwin  Hubbard _  and .  »ou^U^n  h  ^  It  is  true  that  there 
as  1614  and  1620,  respectively.    They  could  ce rtaanly  ha ve  ne J  ^«  ^.^  ^ 

were  two  George  Hubbards,  a  William  Hubbard,  and  a pT^J"^  ,,,,,,.  lvl;lt,IIlsllills 

Wethersfield  between  1636  and  1640. ^  There  ,  ^^^Veth^  Into 'n  fact.  William  dis- 
amongst  them,  but  nothing  so    ar  has  ^^tocam  and  Thomas, 

appears  soon  from  the  records,  leaving  no  traces  of  ^endante ^J  JJ  B  IirBBARD'S 

chudren  appear  to  have  left  no  issue.  '^^r^^^S^SL.  The  names  Richard, 
will.    This  might  have  indicated  some  relationship    et^een    nos  wethersfield,  George 

Nathaniel,  Daniel.  John,  and  William  ^^"^^^SSinU.  because  of  that  coin- 
of  Middletown,  and  William  of  ^T^^^^Sl  the  two  Georges  into  one  person, 
cidence.    Royal  Hinman,  in  his     Puritan  Settlers     has  co^ea  ^  ^.^  T  ]Iam. 

Dr.  David  Dudley  Field  merely  wrote  of  the™  t hat  they  were    tw  ^  ^  ..  George 

mond  Trumbull,  LL.D..  in  his  •  Memorial  History  of  H      ford  Co       ^  ^^  ^  .,     ^ 

^So^^ 

GEORGE  HUBBARD  was  bom  in  i6oi,  and  probably  in  eastern  or 
denning  his  birthp.ace  or  time  ^     ^H^    These 

and  l636,  and  located  the  towns  of  Windso  *£g*£^  ^  q£  ^ 
Ct,  also   Springfield    Mass.     GEORM   HU BB A  ^ 

nnmber.     He  was  given  six  acres  of  land     by  c  ^  ^ 

with  privilege  of  Wood  &  keeping  cows  on  the  common, 

269 


270 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


on  a  lot  adjacent  to  the  land  of  James  Ensign  and  George  Graves  on  a 
road  that  ran  parallel  with  the  Connecticut  River,  according  to  an  early 
map,  now  extant.  This  road  ran  from  the  South  Meadow  to  George 
Steel's  land,  and  then  turned  and  ran  across  the  "  ox  pasture  "  towards 
Wethersfield,  passing  near  to  the  Great  Swamp.  In  1640  he  married 
Elizabeth  Watts,  daughter  of  Richard*  and  Elizabeth  Watts,  and  was 
then  assigned  a  "  home-lot  "  and  land  upon  the  east  side  of  the  "  Great 
River."  The  colonial  records  show  that  "William  Swayne  and  George 
Hubbard  were  appointed  Sep  4,  1640,  appraisers  of  the  estate  of  Ed- 
ward Mason,"  and,  April  24,  1649,  Geo.  Hubberd  was  "  fined  ^10  for 
exchanging  a  gunn  with  an  Indian."  He  appears  to  have  disposed  of 
his  land  and  removed  with  about  fifteen  other  families  in  March,  1650- 
51,  to  Mattabesett,  so  called  until  1653,  when  it  became  Middletown.  It 
swelled  rapidly  in  size  from  accretions  from  Wethersfield,  Ct.,  and  Row- 
ley, Chelmsford,  and  Woburn,  Mass.,  requiring  afterward  a  division  into 
sections  known  as,  respectively,  Middletown,  East  Middletown  or  Chath- 
am—now Portland,  North  Middletown  or  Upper  Houses— now  Crom- 
well, and,  later,  Middlefiekl  and  Westfield.  About  1650,  or  when  he  left 
Hartford,  he  carried  with  him  a  commission  from  the  Colonial  Govern- 
ment as  "  Indian  Agent  and  Trader  for  the  Mattabesett  District."  In 
1654  he  was  made  freeman,  and  settled  with  his  son-in-law,  Thomas 
AVctmore,  upon  opposite  corners  on  the  east  side  of  Main  Street.  He 
owned  large  land  tracts  on  the  west  side  and  on  the  east  side  of  the  river. 
These  lands  were  recorded  Sep  5,  1654.  He,  Thomas  Wetmore  and  two 
other  land  owners  on  the  west  side  of  the  street,  gave  land  for  the  second 
meeting-house.  Steps  were  taken  for  erecting  the  first  meeting-house 
Feb  10,  1652.  Mr.  Samuel  Stow  of  Cambridge  College,  England,  for 
several  years  temporarily  had  charge  of  this  congregation.  The  records 
read:  "  It  was  agreed  at  a  meeting  at  John  Halls  hous  to  build  a  meet- 
ing hous  and  to  make  it  20  fot  square  &  10  fot  between  sill  and  plat,  the 
heygt  of  it."  This  structure  was  a  one-story  log  house  with  a  palisade 
around  it,  and  GEORGE  HUBBARD,  living  adjacent,  was  naturally 

*  He  was  an  ordinal  proprietor  of  Hartford,  and  died  about  1665  and  his  widow  about  1676.  They 
had  children  besides  Elizabeth  (Watts)  Hubbard,  William  Watts,  who  returned  to  and  died  in  Eng- 
land, and  Captain  Thomas  Watts,  who  married  Elizabeth  Steel,  sister  of  James  Steel  who  married 
Ann' Bishop,  the  sister  of  Mary  Bishop  who  married  George  Hubbard  of  Wethersfield.  Captain 
Thomas  Watts  commanded  the  troops  against  the  Narragansett  Indians  in  1675  and  the  river  expedi- 
tion in  1677.  He  died  about  1683  quite  wealthy,  leaving  an  estate  of  £1,383.  10s.,  of  which  £100  apiece 
went  to  the  children  of  George  Hubbard;  and  to  his  son  Samuel  Hubbard,  whom  he  brought  up,  being 
childless,  he  left  his  home  lot  and  considerable  more  property,  real  and  personal.  The  other  daughter 
of  Richard  and  Elizabeth  Watts  was  Eleanor,  who  married  Dec  23,  1647,  (1)  Nathaniel  Brown,  son  of 
Percy  Brown  of  Snelston,  Derbyshire,  Eng.,  and  nephew  of  Lady  Elizabeth  Morgan  and  Sir  John 
Morgan,  Kt.,  of  Chillworth,  Surrey,  Eng  He  came  over  under  the  charge  of  Rev.  Thomas  Hooker 
Eleanor  (Watts)  Brown  then  married  (2)  Jasper  Clements  of  Middletown,  b  in  England  in  1614,  d  in 
Middletown  in  1678,  leaving  a  handsome  bequest  for  the  support  of  schools.  She  then  married  (3) 
Nathaniel  Willett  of  Hartford  and  died  Sep  28,  1703,  leaving  Thomas,  Nathaniel,  John,  and  Benoni. 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  MIDDLE  TOWN,  CT 


271 


THE    OLD    FIRST    MEETING    HOUSE*    OF    MIDDLETOWN,    CT. 

selected  as  its  keeper.  Dec  17,  1666,  he  was  allowed  "40  shillings  for 
sweeping  the  meeting-house  and  keeping  the  glass  [hour-glass]."  This 
also  included  the  services  of  his  eldest  son,  Joseph,  who  beat  the  drum 
to  assemble  the  congregation  and  to  give  warning  of  the  approach  of 
Indians.  Ten  men  organized  this  church  formally  in  1668  and  signed 
its  covenant,  the  first  minister,  Nathaniel  Collins,  one  of  the  first  gradu- 
ates of  Harvard,  heading  the  list  of  signatures.  Much  of  the  "  confes- 
sion of  faith  "  is  still  the  creed  of  the  church,  which  eventually  came  to 
be  known  as  the  Old  North  Church.  The  donated  land  abutted  "  against 
the  eorners  of  George  Hubbard  &  Thomas  Wetmer  on  the  east  side — 
Thomas  "Wetmer  half  a  rod  at  ye  north  corner;  George  Hubbard  half  a 
rod  wide,  three  rods  in  length,  against  ye  body  of  ye  meeting-house  and 
from  thence  out  into  an  angle  thre  or  four  rods  further,"  making  in  all 
thirty -two  feet  square.  In  ease  the  meeting-house  was  removed  the  land 
given  was  to  "  return  to  ye  proprietors  again."  This  site  was  exactly  in 
the  middle  of  the  highway,  near  or  between  what  are  now  known  as 
Liberty  and  Grand  streets.  Most  of  these  covenanters  located  near  this 
meeting-house,  at  the  northern  end  of  Main  street,  where  is  now  St. 
John's  Square,  though  three  resided  at  "  Upper  Houses."  An  appraise- 
ment of  his  property  March  22,  1670,  showed  him  to  be  worth  ^90.  10s. 
!=,(/.,  and  in  1673^132.10^.  At  his  death  Ids  inventory  showed  him 
worth  ^243.  ios.,  and  possessed  of  a  dwelling-house  and  home  lot  worth 

*  Illustration  furnished  by  Edward  F.  Bigelow  of  Portland,  Ct. 


272  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

£50,  "2  1-3  acres  of  long  meadow  "  worth  ,£18. 10s.,  3  "  acres  of  meadow 
(at  (?)  Pessenchaug)  on  the  east  side  the  Great  River  "  worth  £%  a.  tract 
at  Long  Hill  of  226  acres,  another  "  parcell  west  from  the  towne  "  of  300 
acres,  one  "  parcell  on  the  east  side  the  Great  River  "  of  464  acres,  and 
the  "  one-halfe  Lott "  of  30  acres,  a  total  of  over  one  thousand  acres. 
His  original  will  is  on  file  in  the  Hall  of  Records  at  Hartford,  Ct,  in  a 
box  labelled  "Wills — H,  1647  to  1750,"  and  bears  date  of  May  22,  1681. 
In  this  document  he  states  that  he  is  "  eighty  years  in  age,  yet  in  com- 
fortable health  of  body  &  haveing  the  use  of  my  understanding,"  etc. 
In  his  inventory,  taken  May  13,  1685,  it  is  stated  that  he  "deceased  the 
18  of  March,  1684."  Sergt.  Samuel  Warde,  John  Hall,  senior,  and 
Ebenezer  Hubbard  were  the  witnesses.  His  widow  died  in  1702.  One 
record  of  him  says  that  he  was  "  highly  respected,  and  of  marked  integ- 
rity and  fairness."  He  appears  at  this  distance  of  time  to  have  been 
devout,  industrious,  and  possessed  of  those  sturdy,  wholesome  qualities 
of  mind  and  body  without  which  the  composition  of  our  country  to-day 
would  not  possess  that  element  of  robustness  and  stability  that  has 
enabled  it  to  so  successfully  withstand  foreign  infections,  manners,  and 
monarchisms.  This  New  England  fibre  in  the  governmental-politico 
texture  is  now,  sad  to  note,  becoming  gradually  obliterated  by  unAmeri- 
can  innovations  and  practices.  He  must  have  been  a  man  of  "  marked 
integrity  and  fairness  "  to  have  been  selected  by  the  colony  as  its  Indian 
Trader.  Much  judgment  had  to  be  used  by  this  representative  of  the 
colony  in  these  dealings.  Promiscuous  trading  by  any  one  was  forbid- 
den, as  fire-arms  and  fire-water  were  frequently  bartered  by  indiscreet 
persons,  which  produced  direful  results.  This  resulted  in  the  selection 
of  one  man  to  do  the  trading  for  all.  On  his  judgment  and  prudence 
much  depended.  He  must  have  erred,  however,  at  one  time,  for  the 
Colonial  Court  fined  him  £10  for  exchanging  a  gun  with  an  Indian.  In 
a  spirit  of  charity,  his  descendants  are  privileged  to  conjecture  that  he 
might  have  regarded  the  gun  as  an  old  and  harmless  one  and  incapable 
of  going  off  and  hurting  any  one. 

GEORGE  HUBBARD  and  his  widow  were  buried  in  the  Middletown 
Riverside  Cemetery  (near  the  original  log  church),  laid  out  in  1650,  and 
lying  triangularly  on  the  west  bank  of  the  Connecticut  River,  close  to 
the  Union  Depot,  and  within  a  stone's  throw  of  where  he  resided.  This 
cemetery  was  laid  out  shortly  after  the  year  1750,  and  was  the  only 
burying-ground  until  17 13,  the  inhabitants  upon  both  sides  of  the  river 
using  it.  In  it  are  several  tombstones  bearing  the  years  upon  them  of 
1600.  These  are  mostly  of  blue  slate,  upon  which  the  lettering  better  re- 
tains its  contour  than  upon  the  brown  sandstone,  though  the  slate  some- 
times flakes  off  and  is  thus  lost.     Upon  the  Portland  side  of  the  Con- 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  MIDDLE  TOWN,  CT.         27- 


THE    PRESENT    FIRST    CONGREGATIONAL    CHURCH*    OF    MIDDLETOWN. 

necticut  a  new  cemetery  was  started  in  the  winter  of  17 12-17 13  because 
the  river  was  impassable,  a  funeral  procession  bearing  the  body  of  a 
young  child  being  prevented  from  crossing  and  compelled  to  open  a  new 

*  Illustration  furnished  by  Edward  F.  Bigelow  of  Portland,  Ct. 


274  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 

one  then  and  there  where  are  now  the  stone  quarries.  Tradition  locates 
GEORGE  HUBBARD'S  grave  close  to  the  burying-ground  entrance, 
fronting  west,  on  St.  John's  Square,  but  no  headstones  show  where  he 
or  his  widow's  dust  is  mouldering  This  ancient  graveyard  will  soon 
disappear.  Already  the  octopus  railroad  has  fastened  upon  two  sides 
of  it,  and  the  shrill  locomotive  whistle  is  daily  sounding  an  alarm  to  the 
resistless  dead  that  they  must  make  way  for  the  progressive  living. 
Sacred  dust  has  no  commercial  value,  and  wild  vine-clad  mounds  and 
crumbling,  tottering  tombstones,  are  no  match  for  cormorant  corpora- 
tions. Children — Mary,  Joseph,  Daniel,  Samuel,  George,  Nathaniel, 
Richard  and  Elizabeth. 

MARY— b  in  Hartford,  Ct,  Jan  16,  1641-2,  d  Dec  18,  1721,  m  May, 
1659,  Thomas  Ranney,  b  Scotland,  1616,  d  June  25,  1713,  buried  in 
cemetery  of  Second  Church  of  Christ,*  Cromwell,  Ct.,  near  Middletown, 
the  first  burial  there  (tombstone  now  standing) ;  numerous  of  his  de- 
scendants are  buried  there.  He  was  a  wealthy  man,  and  was  the  only 
son  who  emigrated  to  America.  Children — Thomas  (b  Mch  1,  1 660-1,  d 
Feb  6,  1726-7,  m  May,  1690,  Rebecca  Willett),  John  (b  Nov  14,  1662,  m 
Dec  28,  1693,  Hannah  Turner),  Joseph  (b  Sep,  1663,  d  Mch  3,  1745,  m 
Jan,  1693,  Mary  Starr),  Mary  (b  Oct,  1665,  d  Aug  19,  1734,  m  May  30, 
1682,  Capt  John  Savage,  b  Middletown  Dec  1,  1652,  lived  in  Cromwell, 
d  Oct  31,  1726,  son  John  and  Elizabeth  (D'Aubin)  Savage),  Elizabeth 
(b  Apl  12,  1668),  and  Esther  (b  1674,  d  Apl  1,  1750,  m  Nov  3,  1696, 
Lieut  Nathaniel  Savage,  b  in  Middletown  May  7,  1671,  lived  in  Port- 
land, across  the  river  from  Middletown,  d  Jan  4,  1734-5,  son  John  and 
Elizabeth  (D'Aubin)  Savage. 

ELIZABETH — b  in  Middletown,  Ct,  Jan  15,  1659,  youngest  child  of 
George  and  Elizabeth  (Watts)  Hubbard,  d  there  Dec  6,  1725,  m  Feb  20, 
1684,  Thomas  Wetmore,  b   Oct   19,    1652,   d  Feb  1,  1689,  second  son  of 


*  The  North  Society  (Upper  Houses— now  Cromwell)  of  Middletown  in  1714  consisted  of  49  mem- 
bers and  the  pastor.  Rev.  Joseph  Smith.  The  following  quaint  extracts  are  taken  from  the  church's 
old  record  book:  "  Att  a  meeting  of  the  north  society  in  middletown  february  18,  1713-14,  the  return 
of  the  committy  was  that,  provided  the  society  give  mr.  Smith  a  comfortable  maintenance  he  will 
settel  with  us.  *  *  *  Att  ye  same  meeting  ye  society  agreed  with  sergnt  Clark  to  make  the  body 
of  seats  in  the  meeting  house  for  eight  shillings  for  each  seat.  *  *  *  Att  ye  meeting  march  27, 
1714,  the  society  made  choice  of  Joseph  raney,  a  committy  man,  to  carry  on  ye  school  house  with 
serg.  savag  and  John  sage.  *  *  *  Att  ye  meeting  february  1,  1714-15,  the  society  agreed  that  what 
the  forty  shillings  on  the  thousand  pounds  and  ye  town  money  doth  not  reach  to  maintain  the  half 
year  school,  what  is  wanting  shall  be  levied  on  the  poles  of  the  children  from  five  yere  to  ten,  farmers 
only  excepted.  *  *  *  Att  the  same  meeting  the  society  made  choise  of  Thomas  Stow  senior  and 
Thomas  rany  senior  and  John  Clark  to  appoint  and  warn  meetings  so  often  as  there  is  occasion  in  ye 
society.  *  *  *  At  a  meeting  of  ye  society  february  15,  1714-15,  the  society  agreed  with  Samll  stow 
to  beate  the  drum  and  sweep  the  meeting  hous  for  the  yeare  ensuing  and  to  look  after  the  doors  for 
one  pound  five  shillings  money.  Att  the  same  meeting  Joseph  rany  was  alowd  by  the  society  seven 
shillings  for  going  to  Hartford  twice  on  the  societys  account.'" 


GEORGE  HUBBA  RD,  OF  MIDDLE  TOW  TV,  CT.         275 

Thomas  of  England  or,  perhaps,  Wales,  and  Sarah  (Hall)  Wetmore,  d 
Dec  7,  1664,  dau  John  Hall  of  Hartford.  Thomas  Wetmore,  Sr,  then 
m  (1)  Mary  Pratt,  (2)  Katherine  Leete,  and  was  the  richest  man  in  Mid- 
dletown;  his  estate,  inventoried  Jan  7,  1681,  after  death,  at  ^468.  2.  3. 
He  left  nine  boys  and  seven  girls,  all  mentioned  as  legatees,  with  their 
ages,  in  the  inventory.  Thomas  and  Elizabeth  (Hubbard)  Wetmore 
left  but  two  children — Elizabeth  (b  Sep  2,  ?  1686),  and  Thomas  (b  Jan 
S,  16S8-9,  d  Feb  1,  16S8-9). 

P'  JOSEPH— b  in  Hartford  Dec  10,  1643,  d  in  Middletown  Dec  26, 
•  .  m  Dec  29,  1670,  Mary  Porter,  b  1650,  d  in  Middletown  June  10, 
1707,  sister  of  Dr.  Daniel  Porter,  d  1690,  and  Robert  Porter,  d  1689,  of 
Hartford  and  later,  Farmington.  (From  this  line  of  Porters  descended 
Noah  Porter,  President  of  Yale  College.)  JOSEPH  is  named  in  the 
records  as  assistant  to  his  father  in  keeping  in  order  the  first  church  in 
Middletown,  of  which  his  father  was  one  of  its  ten  founders  in  1652,  or- 
ganized officially  in  1668,  and  was  deputed  to  beat  the  drum  to  call  the 
congregation  to  worship  and  also  to  alarm  them  in  case  of  attack  by  In- 
dians. Lands  were  recorded  to  him  in  1667.  The  inventory  of  his  es- 
tate, taken  in  December,  1686,  is  filed  in  Book  4,  page  248,  Hartford 
(Ct.)  Hall  of  Records,  and  amounts  to  ^"140  and  includes  among  other 
items  472  acres  of  land,  dwelling  house,  barn,  shop,  3  horses,  4  cows,  11 
sheep,  4  pigs,  2  spinning  wheels,  1  leather  suit,  1  gun,  one  sword,  1  belt  and 
"  other  ammunition."  His  uncle,  Capt.  Thomas  Watts,  left  him  a  legacy 
<>f  ,/~ioo,  which  is  mentioned  in  the  inventory  in  addition  to  the  estate. 
Children— Joseph  (b  Oct  22,  167 1,  d  1686),  p3  Robert  (see  elsewhere), 
P3  Cf.orge  (see  elsewhere),  P4  John  (see  elsewhere),  Mary  (b  Jan  23, 
.  d  Apl  19,  1682),  and  Elizabeth  (b  March   26,  1683,  was  unm  Dec 

Q1  DAXIEL— bapt  in  Hartford  Dec  7,    1645,  d  in  Haddam,  Ct.,  Nov 

9,  1704,  m  Feb  24,  1669-70,  (1)  Mary  Clark  (d  Dec  24,  1673,  leaving  son 

Q    i )  \mll  (see  elsewhere).     DANIEL  m  Oct  16,  1675,  (2)  Sarah  Corn- 

1 1.  in  Middletown  in  Oct,  1647),  dau  Sergt  William  and  his  second 

Mary  Corn  well,   whom  he  married  in   1639.     His  will,  probated 

Meh   8,    1677-8,  mentions  sons  William,  Jr,  John,  Samuel,  Jacob  and 

Thomas,  daughters  Esther  Stowe,  Sarah  Hubbard  and   Elizabeth  Hall, 

•ving   wife    Mary.      Inventory   ,£233.03.     DANIEL     served    in 

rich  and  Indian  War  in  1680,  and  rem  to  Haddam,  Ponset  District, 

about  1700.     Children  (by  Sarah  Cornwell) — Margaret  (b  July  20, 1676, 

d  Apl  10,  1769,  m  Mch   18,    1704,  John  Ward,  d  July  8,  1761  ),  Mary  (b 

Jan  16,  1678,  d  y),  Jacob  (?),  Sarah  (1)  Meh  10,  1680-81, m  Edward  Fos- 

M    hitable  (b  Aug  18,  1683),  and  Mary  (b  Meh  23,  1686,  d  July  9, 


276  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Ri  SAMUEL— b  May,  1648,  in  Hartford,  d  there  Nov  4,  1732,  m  Aug 
9,  1673,  Sarah  Kirby  (b  in  Hartford,  Jan  16,  1653-4,  dan  John  and 
Elizabeth  (Randall  ?)  Kirby  01  Hartford,  Wethersfield  and  Middletown, 
formerly  of  Rowington,  near  Kenilworth,  Warwickshire,  Eng.  He  ar- 
rived in  the  Hopewell  in  1635,  aged  12,  probably  residing  and  marrying 
in  Dorchester,  Mass.,  and  arriving  in  Hartford  in  the  early  forties.  He 
died  in  1677,  leaving  widow  Elizabeth,  children  Abigail,  aged  11,  Su- 
sannah (aged  13,  m  Cruttenden),  Bethia  (aged  18),  Joseph  (aged  21), 
Sarah  (aged  23,  m  Samuel  Hubbard),  Esther  (aged  25,  m  Stone),  Han- 
nah (aged  27,  m  Andrews),  and  Mary  (aged  32,  m  Buck).  SAMUEL 
HUBBARD  was  reared  and  educated  by  his  uncle,  Captain  Thomas 
who  left  him  his  house  and  lot  and  other  valuable  bequests  in  Watts, 
his  will,  probated  in  Hartford  Oct  22,  1683.  Children — Sarah  (b  Apl  7, 
1674),  Esther  (b  Dec  4,  1675),  R2  Samuel  (see  elsewhere),  Thomas  (b 
Feb  8,  1679),  R3  George  (see  elsewhere),  Elizabeth  (b  Sep  7,  1683), 
Watts  (b  Mch  1,  1686,  d  June  10,  17 10),  Abigail  (b  Apl,  1687,  d  y), 
Mary  (b  Feb,  1688-9,  m  Dec  8,  17 13,  Dr.  Isaac  Lee  of  Middletown  and 
Kensington,  who  d  Aug  6,  1780,  leaving  7  children),  R4  John  (see  else- 
where), and  Sarah  (b  Nov  10,  1696,  m  Oct  2,  1728,  John  Gurney). 

GEORGE — b  Dec  15,  1650,  in  Hartford,  d  unm  in  Middletown,  in 
1675. 

S1  NATHANIEL— b  in  Middletown  Dec  10,  1652,  d  there  May  20, 
1738  (gravestone  standing — 1894),  m  May  29,  1682,  Mary  Earle  (b  1663, 
d  Apl  6,  1732;  gravestone  standing — 1894;  see  Miscellaneous  Data  for 
epitaph).  NATHANIEL  contributed  15J,  his  brothers  Joseph  15s, 
Daniel  10s  and  Richard  6s  toward  the  first  church  bell  used  in  Middle- 
town,  which  supplanted  the  drum.  Extract  from  Colonial  Records — 
Hartford,  May  12,  1692:  "This  Court  doe  for  the  present  upon  good 
consideration  and  till  farther  Order  free  Nath'l  Hubbard  from  Train- 
ing." He  lived  at  Long  Hill  on  the  cross  roads.  Children — Mary  (b 
Mch  9,  1683-4,  d  Sep  14,  1746,  m  (?)  Apl  21,  1726,  Thomas  Bevins,  son 
of  Arthur  Bevins  of  Middletown),  Abigail  (b  Feb  16,  1685-6,  m  Jona- 
than Burr  of  Middle  Haddam  Parish,  who  d  Jan  1,  1735,  leaving  Mary, 
Ebenezer,  Jonathan,  Nathaniel,  Elizabeth,  Abigail,  Thankful  and  Han- 
nah), Elizabeth  (b  July  17,  1688,  m  June  1,  17 10,  Thomas  Wright, 
and  had  Thomas,  John,  Jonas,  Elizabeth,  Mary,  Sarah,  Earl  and  Hep- 
zibali),  S2  Nathaniel  (see  elsewhere),  $3  John  (see  elsewhere),  S4  Ebe- 
nezer  (see  elsewhere),  Sarah  (b  Oct  5,  1694),  Thankful  (b  Oct  6,  1698), 
Hannah  (b  July  4,  1700,  m  Samuel  Wetmore,  who  rem  to  Middlefield, 
Ct),  and  Esther  (b  July  20,  1702,  d  Feb  4,  1742,  m  Dec  21,  1727,  Na- 
thaniel Bacon). 

RICHARD— b   in  Middletown,  July,   1655,    d   there   July   30,    1732, 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  MIDDLE  TOWN,  CT.         277 

(tombstone  standing-1894),  m  Mch  31,  169,,  Martha  Cornwell  (b  Aug. 
30  1669)  dan  John*  and  Mary  (Peck)  Cornwell  of  Hartford.  He  was 
the  sole  executor  of  his  father's  will  and  was  left  the  home-lot,  house, 
barn-  and  all  other  buildings  thereon,  and  was  "  enjoyned  to  provide 
comfortably  for  his  mother  during  her  widdowhood."  Extract  from 
Colonial  Records— At  a  meeting  of  the  Councill,  Oct  9th,  1675:  Rich'd 
Hubberd  and  others:  "  These  are  to  appoynt  you  forthw'th  to  repayre 
to  Midleton  and  if  mr  Goodalls  vessell  be  there,  you  are  to  goe  on 
board  and  guard  her  up  to  Hartford,  unless  the  guard  allready  m  her 
from  that  towne  be  still  on  board  her,  and  in  such  case  you  are  to 
remayne  in  your  towne  vntill  Munday  next,  and  then  you  are  to  repayre 
to  Hartford 'for  farther  orders."  His  will  is  dated  July  14,  i73*>  and  1S 
filed  in  the  Hartford  Hall  of  Records.  Children— Martha  (b  Jan  3, 
1692-3),  Elizabeth  (b  July  1,  1694),  Hannah  (b  June  12,  1696),  Mary 
(b  Apl  9,  1699,  d  May  6,  1699),  Mary  (b  Apl  17,  1700),  and  Richard  (b 
Aug  25,  1706,  d  Nov  8,  1709). 

SONS    OF    JOSEPH    AND    MARY    (PORTER)    HUBBARD. 

p*  ROBERT— b  in  Middletown,  Ct.,  Oct  30,  1673,  d  there  June  19, 
1740  (tombstone  standing- 1894),  m  Mch  4,  1703,  Abigail  Adkins  Ward 
(b  Sep  11,  1676,  d  Apl  23,  1735),  dau  Josiah  and  Elizabeth  (Adkins) 
Ward  of  Middletown.  On  her  tombstone  in  Riverside  Cemetery,  Mid- 
dletown, is  the  inscription: 

Pious.  Kind,  &  Good,  Lov'd  by  all  Near, 
Usefull  on  Earth,  To  Heaven  dear. 
Was  she  whose  dust  Lyes  buried  here. 

Children— Hepzibah  (b  Jan  10,  1703-4),  Phebe  (b  Jan  24,  1704-5,  m  Oct 
-  1 7  32  (2d  wife)  Richard  Ely,  son  Richard  and  Mary  Ely  of  Lyme,  Ct.; 
he  d  1777),  Mary  (b  Oct  24,  1708,  m  (?)  Thomas  Bevans),  and  p>  Robert 
(see  elsewhere)  A  small  gravestone  near  the  parents'  tombstones  also 
indicates  other  children  born  to  them,  viz.:  "  Phebe  1736,  Robert  1742, 

Mica  1747."  „ 

p*  GEORGE— b  in  Middletown  Oct  7,  1675,  d  Dec  16,  1765,  m  Dec  22, 
i7o3  Mehitable  Miller  (b  Mch  28,  16S1,  d  Apl  17,  1 753),  dau  Thomas  and 
nl  wife  Sarah  (Nettleton)  Miller  of  Middletown.  He  served  in  French 
and  Indian  War  as  Lieutenant,  receiving  from  King  George  II  his  com- 
mission October  25,  1728.  He  was  at  the  capture  of  Quebec,  and  was 
buried  at  Easthampton,  near  Chatham,  Ct.  Children-P°  George  (see 
elsewhere),  Thomas  (b  Mch  9,  1705-6,  m  1729,  Thankful  Johnson  and  d 
-  leaving  Thomas  b  1730,  m  Jan  23,  1752,  Phebe  Griffith,  Elizabeth 
b  v^Jcdcdiah  b  1741,  Seth  b  i743,  and  Caleb  b  1748),  MKHiTA»LE_(b 

*  Sereeant  John  Cornwell  was  the  eldest  son  of  Sergeant  William  and  Mary  Cornwell  and  brother 
of  Sarah'Xo  married  Daniel  Hubbard.    Mary  Peck  was  the  dau  of  Deacon  Paul  Peck  of  Hartford. 


27g  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 


June  21,  1708),  Richard  (b  Jan  8,  1712-13,  m  Sep  28,  1738,  Susannah 
Roberts),  Abner  (b  Apl  10,  1715,  d  Apl  6,  1719),  Caleb  (b  Aug  28,  1716, 
m    1739  (1)  widow   Elizabeth    Miller  and   had  Lucretia,  b    1740;    and 

Jemima  b  1742;  he  m  Nov  22,  1744,  (2)  Mary ,  and  had  Mary  b 

1745,  who  m  Capt  Amos  Tryon;  Caleb  b  1747,  d  y;  Caleb  b  1748,  m 
Prudence  Chapman  and  had  Calvin,  Caleb  and  Ansel;  Hezekiah  b  1752; 
and  Abijah  b  1754);  P7  Hezekiah  (see  elsewhere),  and  Abner  (b  July  26, 
1721,  m  Mary  Roberts  and  had  Abner  b  1745,  who  rem  to  Windsor,  Vt., 
m  Edith  Woodward  and  had  Mary  who  m  Henry  Foster,  Lucretia  who 
m  Gershom  Bartlett,  Hannah  (b  17S8),  and  Abner  b  17S6,  m  Naomi 
Hayden  and  rem  to  Rochester,  N.  Y.). 

p*  JOHN— b  in  Middletown  July  30,  1678,0!  there  Jan  2, 1726-7,  m  Feb 
10,  1702-3,  Mary  Phillips  (d  Oct  21,  i736)-  He  owned  land  on  the  East 
side  of  the  river  and  in  what  is  now  known  as  Portland.  He  also  had 
land  ''set  to  him"  by  the  proprietors  of  the  town.  July  21,  1703,  he 
bought  18  acres  of  woodland  of  Mary  M.,  John  and  Thomas  Hurlburt 
(which  was  \  mile  in  length)  "  for  the  sum  of  £\o,  current  species  of 
silver  money."  This  was  near  the  "  Straits,"  about  two  miles  below  the 
city,  on  the  "West  side  of  the  Great  River,"  and  bounded  on  the  West 
by  Francis  Whitmore's  land,  on  the  East  by  "  other  land  of  Hubbards," 
and  on  the  North  by  the  Great  River.  In  the  distribution  of  his  father's 
estate  in  1704  he  was  given  17  and  £  acres,  and  was  to  pay  to  his  sister 
Elizabeth  £9.  7s.  yl.  Robert,  George,  John  and  Elizabeth  are  men- 
tioned in  this  division.  Robert  was  given  the  "  home-lot "  and  obligated 
to  provide  a  comfortable  subsistence  for  the  mother  during  her  natural 
life  on  account  of  this  more  valuable  consideration.  Children— Joseph 
(b  Mch  21,  1703-4),  John  (b  Aug  13,  1705,  d  in  Middletown  Mch  24, 
1775,  called  "Lieut."  on  tombstone  in  Riverside  Cemetery.  Epitaph — 
"  Behold!  The  Noble,  the  Gen'rous,  &  The  Brave  must  yield  their  Bodies 
Victims  to  the  Grave."),  Abigail  (b  Apl  9,  1707,  m  Stephen  Blake), 
P8  Nathan  (see  elsewhere),  Daniel  (b  July  16,  1710),  Hannah  (b  July 

13,  1711,  d  July  10,   1714),  Mary  (b  Sep   20,   1713,  m  and  had 

Solomon  and  Hannah),  Solomon  (b  Aug  20,  1715),  and  Hannah  (b  Aug 
8,  1718). 

SON    OF    ROBERT    AND    ABIGAIL     ADKINS    (WARD)    HUBBARD. 

P5  ROBERT— b  in  Middletown  July  30,  1712,  d  there  Jan  29,  1779, 
settled  in  1730  at  East  Long  Hill,  m  Oct  9,  1735,  Elizabeth  Sill  (b  Nov 
20,  1707,  d  Jan  22,  1799),  dau  Joseph  and  Phebe  (Lord)  Sill  of  Lyme,  Ct. 
Children— Phebe  (b  July  5,  1736,  d  Sep  27,  1736),  Elihu  (b  Aug  17,  1737, 
d  Sep  14,  1770),  Abigail  (b  Jan  5,  1739,  m  Dr.  John  Smith  of  Litchfield, 
Ct.),  Phebe  (b  Oct  10,  1740,  m  David  Wells),  Robert  (b  Mch  2,  1742,  d 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  MIDDLETOWN,  CT.         2jcj 

Aug  9,  1742),  Robert  (b  Oct  5,  1743,  Yale  1769,  m  (ordained  pastor  same 
day  at  Shelbourne,  Mass.)  Oct  20,  1773,  Lucy  Hubbard  (b  Apl  22,  1755), 
dau  Nehemiah  and  Sarah  (Sill)  Hubbard,  and  d  of  consumption  in  Mid- 
dletown  Nov  2,  1788,  leaving  Elilni,  Mary  and  Robert — b  1783,  Yale 
1810,  Rev,  d  May  24,  1840,  m  Mary  Van  Campen,  dau  Moses  Yan  ( 
Campen,  leaving  John  Niles,  Yale  1838,  of  Oswego,  N.  Y.,  and  Cal  ?),  | 
pa  Elijah  (see  elsewhere),  Micah  (b  1747,  d  1747),  P10  Micah  (sue  else- 
where), Elizabeth  (b  1750,  m  James  Morris  of  Litchfield),  and  Samuel 
(b  1752,  dFeb  17,  1757)- 

SONS    OF    GEORGE    AND    MEHITABLE    (MILLER)    HUBBARD. 

P6  GEORGE— b  Sep  18,  1704,  d  Oct  16,  17S9,  m  Apl  20,  1727,  Mary* 
"Robburds"  (Roberts),  who  d  Sep  27,  1789;  commissioned  lieutenant 
by  King  George  III  May  29,  1736;  buried  on  Hog  Hill,  Easthampton, 
near  Middletown;  crossed  swords  on  tombstone.  Children — Mary  (b 
Mch  20,  1728),  P11  George  (see  elsewhere),  Huldah  (b  May  26,  1734), 
Mehitable    (b  Oct   12,  1738,  d  June   2,    1744),  and  Abner  (b  Aug  29, 

1744)-  _ 

p~  HEZEKIAH— b  in  Middletown  Mch  6,  1718-19,  m  Oct  10,   1739, 

Ruth  Centre.  He  was  an  active  Rev.  War  patriot,  and  furnished  sup- 
plies for  the  troops,  f  Children— Hezekiah  (b  1742,  Lieut,  in  Rev.  War 
according  to  tradition,  m  Oct  8,  1764,  Esther  Foster,  and  had  Hezekiah,  b 
( )ct  4,  1765,  and  4  others,  names  unknown),  and  Jonathan  (b  abt  1750, 
m  Esther  Starrof  Middletown  and  had  Jonathan,  b  1775;  Esther,  b  1777, 
d  y;  Daniel,  b  1779,  <*  y;  Daniel,  b  17S5;  Esther,  b  1787,  m  William 
Fordham;  William,  b  1789;  Ruth,  b  1791,  m  Daniel  Cotton;  Robert,  b 
1783,  d  in  Granville,  Mass.,  in  1855,  m  Mehitable  Turner,  and  had  Es- 
ther' b  1807;  Harriet,  b  1809;  Elizabeth,  b  1S20;  and  Linus,  b  1810,  rem 
to  Granville,  m  (1)  Elvira  Cooley,  (2)  Elizabeth  Case  and  had  Clarilla, 
Margaret,  Selden,  Janet,  Esther  and  Emerson;  and  Richard,  b  1781, 
lived  in  New  Haven,  Ct,  m  (1)  Sarah  Southmayd  in  .827,  (2)  Rhoda 
Graham,  and  had  Edwin,  b  1805,  m  Lucy  Strong  and  had  Elizabeth, 
Harriet  and  William;  Hiram,  b  1808,  m  Marietta Kelsey  and  had  Hiram 
and  Frederick;  Richard,  b   1810;  William,  b  1S13;  Frederi  15,  m 

Mary  Strong  and  had  Ellen;  Sarah,  b  1818,  d  y;  Sarah,  b  [828,  m  Har-  ; 
vev  Barker;  Susan,  b  [831,  m  Edward  Spencer;  Henry,  b  1X33,111  Emma 
Lindley  and  had  Ida,  Henrietta,  and  Lucella;  and  Hannah,  b  1838). 

♦Douglas  Hubbard  and  Edwin  Bubbard,  genealogists,  record  "Sarah  Cole"  as  wife  of  this  George, 
but  the  compiler  found  nothing  In  Middletown  records  to  justify  their  claim. 

+  One    uthor itv  says  he  had  10  children  ;  the  compiler  finds  two.    There  were  some  •  ll.v,  k.ahs, 
dJeXteoSao  and  Hannah  (Dickinson)  Hubbard  of  Tolland,  Ct    who  were  o,  the  John  and 
Ma^Merlm  branch.    Some  of  them  lived  in  Badley,  M  »"  the  two  lines  are  herewith 

confused. 


280  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

SON    OF    JOHN    AND    MARY    (PHILLIPS)    HUBBARD. 

ps  NATHAN— b  in  Middletown  May  4,  1709,  d  in  Sandisfield,  Berk- 
shire County,  Mass.,  May  18,  1788,  m  at  Waterbury,  Ct,  (1)  Lydia  Judd, 
fifth  child  of  Nathaniel  Judd,  of  Wallingford,  Ct.  NATHAN  sold 
property  in  Middletown  in  1630  to  John  Whittemore,  and  in  1633,  on 
account  of  dissatisfaction  with  a  former  distribution  of  the  estate  of 
their  father,  "  John  Hubbard,  Sen.,"  they  mutually  agreed  to  a  new  dis- 
tribution, which  agreement  all  the  children  signed.  He  sold  his  "  home 
lot  "in  1734,  and  rem  to  Waterbury;  thence  to  Berkshire  Co.,  Mass., 
where  he  m  (2)  Mary  Hough  (b  Mch  8,  17 15,  d  in  Sandisfield  Nov  2, 
181 2;  was  blind  many  years).  Children  (b  in  Waterbury,  by  Lydia 
Judd) — P12John  (see  elsewhere),  Imer,  or  "  Immer  "  (b  July  30,  1741,  d 
Jan  13,  1745),  Eli  (b  May  23, 1745,  d  Jan  10, 1814),  Nathan  (b  at  Walling- 
ford Feb  29, 1747,  settled  as  pastor  at  Sheffield,  Mass.,  m  Nov.  14,  1771, 
Lucy  Kelsey,  and  had  Thankful  b  Aug  6,  1772;  Mary  b  July  16,  1774; 
Daniel  b  Feb  11,  1780;  Saniuelh  Nov  3,  1782;  Nathan  b  Nov  24,  1777), 
Lydia  (b  June  23,  1750,  d  June  16, 1816,  m  Joel  Bacon,  son  of  Nathaniel 
and  Ann  (Harrison)  Bacon),  Judd  Imer,  or  "  Judimer  "  (b  May  20,  1751, 
d  Mch,  1830  (Rev.  soldier),  m  Dec  16,  1786,  Jerusha  Morley,  and  had 
William  b  Nov  1,  1781;  As  her  b  June  24,  1784;  Jerusha  b  Mch  17,  1786; 
Achsah  b  Nov  14,  1787;  Imer  b  Aug  23,  1790;  Walter  b  Jan  10,  1792; 
Louise  b  Oct  28,  1795,  and  William  b  May  11,  1800),  Mary  (b  July  28, 
1756,  d  Dec  8,  1786),  Nathaniel  (b  Nov  17,  1756,  d  Apl,  1830,  m  Rhena 

■ ,  b  1759,  d  Apl  17,  1787),  and  Sarah  (b  Mch  4,  1762,  in  Berkshire 

Co. — possibly  of  second  wife — d  Oct  26, 1764). 

SONS  OF  ROBERT  AND  ELIZABETH  (SILL)   HUBBARD. 

P9  ELIJAH — b  in  Middletown  in  1745,  d  suddenly  May  30,  1808,  while 
attending  the  General  Assembly  at  Hartford.  In  May,  1777,  the  Gov- 
ernor of  Connecticut  and  the  Council  of  Safety  appointed  him  Commis- 
sary and  Superintendent  of  Stores  for  the  Continental  Troops  in  Conn., 
which  duties  he  ably  performed.  He  engaged  in  the  West  India  trade 
as  a  merchant  after  the  Revolutionary  War  and  amassed  a  fortune  in- 
ventoried at  $144,971.91,  and  was  also  in  the  banking  business,  m  Jan  5, 
1772,  (1)  Hannah  Kent  (b  Mch  7,  1746,  d  Dec  9,  1778),  dau  John  Kent,  and 
(2)  Abigail  Dickinson  (b  1758,  d  1838),  and  had  Samuel  Dickinson  (see 
Prominent  American  Hubbards)  and  Hannah  (b  1783,  d  Mch  21,  1850, 
m  John  R.  Watkinson  and  had  Jane  and  John  H.).  Children  (by  Han- 
nah Kent) — Elijah  (b  July  31,  1777,  Yale  1795,  mayor  of  Middletown 
and  bank  president,  also  justice  peace,  d  Dec  4,  1846,  m  Oct  26,  1810, 
Lydia  Mather,  b  Aug  11,  1790,  d  Mch  5,  1850,  dau  Samuel  and  Lois 
(Griswold)  Mather;  and  had  Elijah  Kent,  b  Oct  18,  1812,  d  Mch  26,  1839, 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  MIDDLE  TOWN,  CT.         28i 

m  Sep  15,  1834,  Elizabeth  De  Koven  of  Middletown  and  had  Elijah 
Kent  and  Louis  De  Koven;  Henry  Griswold  (see  Prominent  American 
Hubbards);  Margcret  Sill,  b  Oct  7,  181 7,  d  unm  Dec  18,  1831;  John 
Marshall,  b  July  28,  1822,  m  Dec,  1852,  Frances  Fairchild),  and  Eliza- 
beth (b  Jan  11,  1775,  d  Apl  1,  1812,  m  May  5,  1794,  Lydia  Mather's 
brother,  Thomas  Mather,  b  Oct  10,  1768,  merchant  at  Albany  and  Mid- 
dletown, and  had  several  children  names  unknown). 

P">MICAH— b  Sep  8,  1748,  d  Dec  1,  1831,  m  June  10,  1784,  Content 
Guernsey  (b  Sep  9,  1748,  d  Sep  1,  1846),  dau  Lemuel  and  Ruth  (Camp)  ■ 
Guernsey  of  Durham,  Ct.  He  was  a  very  conscientious  and  God-fearing 
man,  stopping  all  labor  Saturday  night  at  sunset  on  his  farm  at  Long 
Hill  to  prepare  for  the  Sabbath.  Children— Ruth  (b  May  9,  1785), 
Elihu  (b  Sep  1,  1786,  d  Dec  6,  1853),  Phebe  (see  Biog  Thomas  Hill 
Hubbard,  under  Prominent  American  Hubbards),  Sarah  (b  Jan  12, 
1790,  d  Dec  4,  1801),  Elizabeth  Sill  (b  July  19,  1794,  d  May  21,  1853,  m 
John  D.  Johnson  of  Middletown  and  Waterbury,  Ct.),  and  Ebenezer 
Guernsey  (b  Jan  10,  1796,  d  Feb  19,  1863,  m  Lucy  Lyman). 

SON    OF    GEORGE    AND    MARY    (ROBERTS)    HUBBARD. 

pn  GEORGE— b  in  Middletown  Feb  6,  i73o-i,d  in  Haddam  Jan  7, 
1809,  m  Jan  23,  1752,  to  Mary  Stocking  by  Rev.  Benjamin  Bowers  (b 
1735^  d  Feb  19,  1827).  Children— George  (b  Aug  17,  1758,  d  Nov  29, 
1838,  m  Mehetable  Miller),  Mehetable  (b  Feb  18,  1762,  d  Oct  9,  1800,  m 
Sylvester  Bronson),  Jesse  (b  June,  1764,  d  Nov  5,  1844,  m  Nancy  Coe), 
ELiAs(b  Aug  26,  1766,  d  May  5,  1810,  m  Polly  Sears),  p13  Asa  (see  else- 
where), Zadock  (b  Jan  8,  1771,  d  Feb  8,  i860,  m  Abigail  Butler,  b  1772, 
d  June  12,  1761;  they  lived  in  Lenox,  Mass.,  where  he  bought  land  in 
1797,  and  moved  in  1810  to  Montpelier,  Vt,  where  both  died,  leaving 
Maria,  who  m  Ruf us  Adams  and  had  5  children;  Clarissa,  who  m  Ansel 
Thomas  and  had  10  children;  Mary,  who  died  young;  Priscilla,  who  m 
Sears  Luce  and  had  2  children;  William  B.,  whom  Eliza  Ann  Smith  and 
had  5  children;  Mary,  who  m  Alanson  Nye  and  had  7  children;  George 
Stocking— -b  Jan  12,  1806,  living  in  Montpelier,  Vt.— who  m  Sarah  M. 
Davis— d  June  16,  1869— and  had  6  children;  Zadock,  whom  but  d  child- 
less in  South  America;  Hester,  who  m  Horace  Fifield  and  had  8  children; 
and  Abigail,  who  m  Timothy  Marsh  and  had  7  children  and  is  living  in 
Hartford,  Ct),  Ansel  (b  Jan  15,  1774,  d  Jan  17,  1841,  m  Rebecca  Hedges 
and  had  Rebecca,  b  abt  1800,  m  Isaac  Dean;  Ansel,  b  abt  1802;  Jane,  b 
abt  1804;  Cornelia,  b  abt  1806;  Pascal,h  abt  1808,  m  Jane  Hough  and 
had  Pascal,  Jane,  Francis,  and  George;  Fidelia,  b  abt  18 10,  m  Abijah 
Roberts;  Elijah,  b  abt  1S12,  m  Jane  Badger;  Sylvester,  b  abt  1814,  m 
Fanny  Johnson;  and  Langdon  C,  b  Nov  1,  1815,  m  in  Middletown,  Ct., 


282  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

Oct  7,  1840,  (1)  Ann  M.  Badger,  d  Feb  7, 1846,  dau  Joseph  Badger,  leav- 
ing two  sons  who  d  y;  he  then  m  Sep  5,  1848,  (2)  Susan  E.  Mosely,  b 
1821,  dau  Jonathan  W.  Mosejy  of  Clinton,  N.  C,  where  Langdon  C.  rem 
to  from  Middletown  in  1835,  and  is  now  U.  S.  District  Commissioner 
there;  children — Thomas  L.,  b  July  7,  1849,  m  Lessie  Herring;  Robert 
H.,  b  June  16,  1851,  m  Ida  E.  Peden;  Ann  Maria,  b  Dec  27,  1852,  d  y; 
George  M.,  b  Jan  18,  1855,  d  y;  Mary  C,  b  June  2,  1857,  m  Rev.  Thomas 
W.  Smith  of  Winston,  N.  C;  William  G.,  b  Jan  3,  i860,  m  Bessie  Holmes; 
Susan  E.,  b  Sep  24,  1861,  m  John  D.  Kerr,  lawyer;  Algernon  L.,  b  Sep 

13,  1863;  and  Adolphus  M.,  b  May  8,  1866),  and  Mary  (b  Apl  16,  1780,  d 
Sep  12,  1838,  m Turpin,  rem  to  Ohio  and  had  10  children). 

SON  OF  NATHAN   AND    LYDIA  (jUDD)   HUBBARD. 

pis  JOHN— b  in  Waterbury,  Ct.,  Dec  22,  1736,  d  in  Sandisfield,  Berk- 
shire Co.,  Mass.,  at  the  home  of  his  son,  Captain  Josiah,  Dec  8,  1825,  m 
Jan  12,  1764,  Hannah  Paine  (b  1745,  d  in  Sandisfield  Sep  19,  1822).  He 
lived  in  Waterbury,  Sheffield,  and  Sandisfield;  was  Lietitenant  in  Capt. 
William  Baker's  Co.  (Col.  John  Fellows),  Eighth  Mass.  Regt.  April  21, 
1775,  two  days  after  the  "  Lexington  Alarm,"  this  company  was  en  route 
to  Boston;  in  camp  at  Roxbury  May  23,  '75;  engaged  at  Bunker  Hill 
and  eight  months  about  Boston.  Children — Sarah  (b  Sep  8,  1767,  d  Apl 
15,  1828),  P14  Josiah  (see  elsewhere),  John  (b  Aug  25,  1770,  djan  6,  1867, 

m and  had  Melinda,  b  Oct  21,  1792;  John  Harvey,  b  Nov  30,  1801; 

and  Rufus  Harlozv,  b  Feb  18,  1804),  Theophilus  (b  Oct  13,  1773,  d  June 

12,  1844,  m and  had  (Rev)  Charles  Harvey,  b  May  18,  1800;  Polly, 

b  July  11,  1S02;  Clarissa,  b  Aug  18,  1804;  Anne,  b  July  14,  1806;  Mary 
Webster,  b  July  31,  1807,  d  y;  Mary,  b  July  14,  1809;  Miranda,  b  Apl  10, 
1811;  Mercy  Anne,  b  Sep  7,  1818;  and  John  Paine,  b  Oct  7,  1822,  m  Dec 

14,  1842,  Laura  Olds),  Solomer  and  Solomon,  twins  (b  Jan  4,  1775,  one  d 
in  1776),  Hannah  (b  Nov  16,  1781),  Lydia  (b  Jan  5,  1784),  and  Clarissa 
(b  July  18,  1786). 

SON    OF    GEORGE    AND    MARY    (STOCKING)    HUBBARD. 

p13  ASA — b  Jan  13,  1769,  d  Jan  26,  1837,  m  Feb  7,  1796,  Sally  Sears  (b 
June  27,  1774,  d  Sep  17,  1861).  Children — Hannah  C.  (b  May  20,  1797,  d 
Jan  21,  1876),  Asa  (b  May  10,  1800,  d  Mays,  l868>  m  °ct  3:>  I§26>  Sarah 
Anne  Tryon  and  had  Gaston  Tryon  b  1828,  manufacturer  in  Middletown, 
Ct.,  strong  temperance  advocate  and  influential  citizen,  m  1852  Maria 
E.  Hubbard,  dau  Alfred  and  Julia  Ann  (Paddock)  Hubbard,  and  had 
Clara,  Ada  A.,  William  G.,  Fred  Perry,  Gaston  Tracy,  and  Wilbur; 
Charles  Carroll,  b  1832,  m  1855  (1)  Frances  E.  Dickinson  and  in  1860(2) 
Mary  A.  Blossom  and  had  by  her  Louis  B.,  Edith,  Agnes  and  Annie  B.; 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  MIDDLE  TO  \\\\\  CT.         2  g 


6 


Carolina,b  1834,  m  1852  Samuel C.  Hubbard  and  had  Arthur  M.,  Frances 
D.,  Henry  S.,  Edwin  S.,  Grace  D.,  Alfred  T.,  Sarah  T.,  Sidney  C,  Ethel 
M.,  and  Philip  L.;  Sarah  T.,  b  1836,  m  1861  Fred  W.  Hubbard  and  had 
Julia  P.,  F.  Sherwood,  Gertrude  A.,  and  Nellie  B.;  Almira  T.,b  June  25, 
1S39,  m  i860  Samuel  Birdsey  Hubbard  (see  Prominent  American  Hub- 
bards)  and  had  Carrie,  Miriam,  Marie  Louisa,  Myra  Tryon,  Samuel 
Birdsey,  Archer  S.,  Albert  Tryon  and  Thomas  Rowland),  Mehetable 
Brown  (b  Mch  25,  1S03,  m  Feb  26,  1837,  Alfred  Roberts  and  had  Laura, 
George  Wilson,  Ellen  Maria  and  Acidic  Mary),  Elisha  Sears  (b  Apl  13, 
1805,  d  Mch  4,  1881,  m  May  20,  1828,  Lucretia  Bidwell — b  July  25,  1807, 
d  Jan  7,  1892 — and  had  Daniel  Bidwell,  Sarah  Sears,  Lucretia,  Thankful, 
Lucy  Maria,  Rosa,  Elisha,  George  Nelson,  Frederic  Goodwin  and  Walter 
Raleigh),  Sally  (b  Apl  4,  1807,  d  Dec  5,  1866,  m  Sep  12,  1833,  Josiah 
Prior  and  had  Mary  Charlotte,  George,  Sarah  and  Maria  Elizabeth), 
Charles  (b  in  Middletown  Feb  5,  1809,  d  July  4,  1885,  m  Sep  23,  1830, 
Delia  S.  Birdsey,  b  in  Middlefield,  Ct.,  Apl  4,  1809,  d  Jan  22,  1890,  leav- 
ing Samuel  Birdsey  (see  Prominent  American  Hubbards);  Ann  Eliza,  b 
An--  20,  1836,  d  May  17,  1877,  m  Joseph  E.  Wilcox  of  Cromwell,  Ct.,  and 
had  five  children;  Harriet  Strong,  b  Dec  14,  1838,  d  Feb  17,  1874,  m  Sep 
20,  1866,  James  C.  Sutton  of  Middlefield;  William  Heury,h  Mch  9,  1841, 
d  Oct  29,  1881,  in  Mandarin,  Fla.,  m  in  Oct,  187 1,  at  Jacksonville,  Fla., 
Emeline  S.  Folsom  and  had  Mary  Hattie,  Henry  Marvin,  Charles  Bird- 
sey and  Myra  Emeline;  Frances  Delia,  b  Feb  8,  1844,  in  Middlefield,  m 
Nov  20,  1866,  Milton  H.  Miller  of  Middlefield,  b  there  Nov  27,  1S42,  and 
had  Miriam  Huntley  and  Arthur  Birdsey  Miller;  Ellen  Maria,  b  Mch  7, 
.  111  in  Middletown  in  May,  1868,  Andrew  D.  Miller  and  had  Her- 
bert William  and  Ernest  David;  Charles  Jacob,  b  Apl  12,  1852,  m 
Aug-,  icSSj,  Katherine  Toomey,  and  had  Oliver  Cromwell,  Ernest  Bird- 
sex-,  Lillian  Frances  and  Florence  Delia),  Jacob  (b  Feb  14,  181  i,d  Mch 
9,  [87  \ ),  George  Stocking  (b  Mch  21, 1S13,  m  Sep  4,  1S13,  Elizabeth  Ann 
Arnold  and  had  George  Arnold,  John  Jay,  Seth  Shailer,  Charles  J  a red, 
Helen  Maria,  Anna  Elizabeth  and  LcRoy),  Mary  Stocking,  twin  (b 
Mch  21,  1S13,  m  Dec  6,  1838,  Abner  Roberts  and  had  Eugene  Francis, 
Charles  Edgar  and  Em  ma  J  Ian'),  and  Lucy  Maria  (b  Jan  28,  1817, m 
27,  [844,  Daniel  Bidwell,  who  was  b  18  19  and  d  July  19,  1 S47.  Lucy 
Maria  (Hubbard)  Bidwell  lives  at  Farm  Hill,  near  Middletown,  Ct. — 
1894). 

SON   OK   JOHN    AM)    HANNAH   (PAINE)    HUBBARD. 

p14  JOSIAH — b  in  Sandisfield,  Berkshire  County,  Mass.,  Nov  27,  176S, 
d  there  Jan  1 1,  1834  (called  "  Captain  "  on  tombstone  and  also  in  various 
documents).   He  was  a  large  farmer,  and  m  May  30,  1792,  Eunice  Chapm 


284 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


(b  Oct  13,  1769,  d  June  15,  1849)  of  Sandisfield.  Children— Mary  (b  Apl 
28,  1793,  d  Sep  10,  1866,  m  May  29, 1814,  Daniel  Fargo  and  had  Egbert), 
sIrah  (b  July  21,  1794,  d  July  8,  1795),  Sarah  (b  June  17,  1796,  d  Apl 
20,  1865,  m  Dec  14,  1820,  Ardon  Judd  and  had  Alfred,  Byron,  Wallace 
and  Sarah  Jane),  Fanny  (b  Apl  4,  i798,  d  Mch  27,  i887,  m  Sep  18,  1822, 
Anson  Merriman  of  Southington,  Ct,  and  had  Alfred,  Josiah,  Julia, 
Lydia  and  Lucctta),  Mira  (b  Nov  3,  1800,  d  Oct  7,  1874,  m  May  1,  1833, 
Theron  Warner  and  had  Henry,  William,  Louisa,  Mary,  and  Carrie), 
Lewis  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line  Edward  Warren  Day),  Louisa  (b 
Mch  25,  1806,  d  Feb  7,  1885,  m  May  10,  1827,  Orrin  Wood  and  had 
Eunice,  Mary,  and  Harlan),  Alfred  Brown  (b  Sep  5,  1808,  d  June  20, 
1877,  m  Delilah  Mitchell  and  had  Amos  T.,  Eunice  A.,  Alfred H,  and 
Howard  A),  and  Joel  Bacon  (b  Jan  8,  1811,  d  Aug  28,  1880,  m  (1) 
Hannah  Walker  and  (2)  Celestia  Sage  and  had  Emily,  Lydia,  Elliott 
and  Harley). 

SON    OF    DANIEL    AND    MARY    (CLARK)    HUBBARD. 

Q2  DANIEL— b  Dec  16,  1673,  rem  to  Haddam  and  m  Dec  8,  1697, 
Susannah  Bailey  of  Haddam,  Ct.,  who  died  before  him  and  he  married 
again,  for  he  mentions  his  "loving  wife  Bathsheba  Hubbard"  in  his 
will,  probated  Jan  14,  1756.  He  was  quite  wealthy,  owning  gristmills 
and  much  landed  estate.  His  eldest  son,  Daniel,  was  his  executor. 
Children— Mary  (b  1678,  m  John  Parmlee),  Q3  Daniel  (see  elsewhere), 

Susannah  (b   1703,  m  Crampton),  Elizabeth  (b  1706,  m  Ebe- 

nezer  Munger),  Hannah  (b  1708,  m  June  13,  1734,  Elisha  Cone,  son  of 
Caleb  and  Elizabeth  Cone;  Elisha  Cone  was  b  in  Haddam  Sep  11, 1709, 
and  d  there  Mch  6,  1809,  aged  100;  at  97  he  could  mount  a  horse  from 
the  ground;  he  had  Elisha,  b  Dec  3,  1735,  d  June  16,  1779,  m  Martha 
Bates;  Anna,  b  Nov  13,  1737,  d  Nov  21,  1775;  Silas,  b  Feb  19,  1739,  d 
Nov,  1747;  Hannah,  b  1742,  d  Dec  1,  1755;  Silas,  b  Sep  15,  1748,  d  Feb, 
1827;  and  Mary,  b  Dec,  1751),  Martha  (b  1710,  m  Abraham  Stowe), 
Thomas  (b  17 14,  lived  in  Haddam,  large  landowner,  Rev  soldier,  m  (1) 
Elizabeth  Snow,  (2)  Sarah  Walkley  and  had  Agnes,  b  1736,  m  Lewis 
Smith;  Hannah,  b  1740,  m  John  Brainerd;  Daniel,  b  1742,  m  Anne 
Woodruff;  and  Q10  Thomas— see  elsewhere),  and  Q4  Jeremiah  (see  else- 
where). 

SONS    OF    DANIEL    AND    SUSANNAH    (BAILEY)    HUBBARD. 

Q3  DANIEL— b  in  Haddam  in  1701,  d  there  Mch  11,  1755,  m  abt  1727 
Temperance  Shaler.  He  was  called  Lieutenant  and  left  a  good-sized 
estate.  His  widow  Temperance  and  son  Samuel  administered  upon 
his  estate  Feb  2,  1756,   the  eldest  son,  Joel,  receiving  a  double  portion. 


LEWIS    HUBBARD 

of  Sandisfield,  Berkshire  County,  Mass.,  and  Leroy,  Genesee 

County,  N.  Y. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.) 


285 


2 86  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

Temperance  Hubbard  was  appointed  guardian  of  Shaler,  Job  and 
Martha,  all  minors.  Children— Joel  (b  abt  1728,  d  in  Haddam  Mch 
25,  1802,  m  Anne  Clark  and  had  John,  Abigail,  Judith,  Sarah,  Mary  and 
Joel),  Daniel  b  abt  1729,  m  Eunice  Clark  and  had  Matthew,  who  m  (1) 
Wealthy  Smith,  (2)  Maria  Brainerd;  Q5  Solomon  (see  elsewhere);  Aaron, 
who  m  (1)  Rebecca  Bates,  (2)  Mary  Dexter;  possibly  he  m  also  Esther 
Tibbetts;  Daniel;  Rosanna,  who  m  Samuel  Scovil  and  had  6  children; 
Submit,  who  m  Abijah  Hulbert  and  had  6  children;  Q6  Israel  (see  else- 
where),  Clark,  who    m  Ruth    Scovil;  Q7 Moses  (see    elsewhere);    and 

Margery,  who  m Nellis  and  had  9  children),  Samuel  (b  abt  1731, 

m  abt  1759  Sarah  Smith  and  had  Samuel,  b    1761,  d  in  Haddam  Sep  4, 

1826,111  Zeruriah — ,  b   1764,  d  Dec   11,    1826;  Smith;  and  Sally), 

James  (b  abt  1732,  111  Hepsibah  Smith  and  had Bcnja min  who  m  Huldah 
Bailey  and  had  Abner,  Ruah,  Sybil,  Benjamin,  James,  Eli,  Hiram, 
Jesse  and  Anne;  Temperance ;  James,  who  m  Susan  Watts  and  had 
Elanson,  Melinda,  Elizabeth,  James,  Joseph,  Julia,  Darius,  Susan- 
nah, Esther  and  Benjamin;  Hepsibah;  Jonathan,  who  m  Sarah  Thomas 
and  had  Edward,  Diochet,  Jonathan,  Hepsibah  and  Harriet;  Eli; 
Esther  ;  Sybil  and  Amy),  Timothy  (b  abt  1733,  m  Sarah  Bailey  and  had 
Michael,  Calvin,  Asahel,  Abel,  Timothy  and  Martha),  Aaron  (b  abt 
1734,  m   Damaris  Walkley  and  had  Ebcn,  Reuben,  Debby,  Zilpha  and 

Lizzie),  Edmund  (b  abt  1735,  m ,  no  children),  Joe  (b  abt  1739,  d 

in  Haddam  in  1S22,  m  Thankful  Clark,  b  1740,  d  Mch  13,  1835,  and  had 
Elijah,  Mattie,  Lueinda,  David,  Dana,  Job  and  Clarency),  Shaler  (b 
1742,  m  Anne  Walkley  and  had  Simeon,  Sylvester,  Richard,  Senath, 
Clarency  and  Anne),  and  Martha  (b  abt  1743,  m  Benjamin  Burr). 

Q4  JEREMIAH— b  in  Haddam,  Ct.,  Feb  1,  17 16,  d  there  Nov 30,  1S03, 
m  Nov  11,  1736,  (1)  Alice  Shaler,  (2)  Mary  Wells  (or  Shalei°),  b  17 15, 
d  in  Haddam  July  21,  1S10.  Children  (by  Alice  Shaler)— Susannah  (b 
July  31,  1737,  d  unm),  Asa  (b  Nov  22,  1738,  d  unm),  Catharine  (b  Dec 
i,  1743,  d  unm),  Mary  (b  May  19,  1740,  m  James  Smith),  Q8  Jeremiah 
(see  elsewhere),  David  (b  Aug  20,  1749,  deacon,  Rev  War  pensioner,  111 
Hannah  Clark  of  Haddam  and  had  David,  who  m  Julia  Dickinson  of 
Haddam  and  had  Hannah,  Elizabeth,  Cyrus,  Andrew,  Antoinette  and 
Laura;  Dolly,  who  m  Eli  Hubbard  of  Haddam;  Hannah,  who  became 
3d  wife  of  Amasa  Hubbard  of  Haddam;  Prudence,  who  m  Solomon 
Walkley;  Mary,  who  m  Elias  Smith;  Miriam;  Rhoda  and  Hadassah), 
Dorothy  (b  Feb  17,  1751,  d  Mch  12,  1754),  and  Dorothy  (b  Apl  26, 
1754). 

SONS    OF    DANIEL    AND    EUNICE    (CLARK)    HUBBARD. 

Q5  SOLOMON— b  May,  1758,  d  May  30,  1823,  in  Mayville,  Chautauqua 
Co.,  N.  Y.,  111  Hannah  Willard  (b  1774  on  Long  Island,  N.  Y.,  d  Aug  13, 


GEORGE  II  UBBA  RD,  OF  MIDDLE  TOWN,  CT  287 

1834,  in  Buffalo,  N.  Y.)  Children  (three  died  young) — Elias  (b  Mch  4, 
1798,  in  Greene  Co.,  N.  \\,  moved  to  Buffalo,  d  there  July  22,  1851,  m 
abt  1830  Emily  Bird  and  had  one  child),  JusTUs(b  near  Durham,  N.  Y., 
Dec  14,  1799,  d  1861,  m  widow  Sophia  Green),  Electa  (b  abt  1803,  in 
Greene  Co.,  m  Ira  Hull  of  Otto,  Cattauraugus  Co.,  N.  Y.,  and  had  7 
children),  Julia  (b  Oct  14,  1804,  in  Greene  Co.,  m  John  Daugherty, 
merchant,  of  Buffalo,  and  had  Elms,  who  m  Sophronia  Clark;  Lichia 
Louisa,  who  m  James  S.  Lyon  and  had  William  Workman,  Emma 
Louise,  Henry  Lloyd,  Eva,  Florence,  Carry  and  Charles  Gilbert  Lyon; 
and  Emily  Jane,  who  m  Dr.  A.  L.  Gilbert),  Fanny  (b  abt  1809,  m  James 
Weller  of  Buffalo  and  had  8  children),  Louisa  (b  abt  181 2,  in  Greene 
Co.,  d  1880,  (?)  m  William  Weller),  Solomon  (b  Oct,  1817,  in  Greene 
Co.,  lawyer,  Probate  Judge  Livingstone  County,  m  1839,  Anna  Merinda 
Parker),  and  Silas  (b  May  9,  1821,  at  Mayville,  resided  in  Hudson, 
McLean  Co.,  111.,  physician,  m  Sep  27,  1849,  at  Buffalo,  Frances  Julia 
Reed  and  had  Charles  Silas,  b  July  21,  1850,  at  Buffalo,  d  Feb  29,  i860, 
at  Hudson;  Albert  Green,  b  June  9,  1856,  in  Bloomington,  111.,  lives  in 
Buffalo;  William  and  Edward,  twins,  died  in  December,  1858;  Hannah 
Frances,  b  June  10,  1863,  at  Buffalo,  m  James  D.  Larkin  of  Buffalo  and 
had  3  children;  Eliza,  b  Apl  15,  1864,  at  Hudson;  Honor c  Chadboum,  b 
Nov  26,  1868,  at  Hudson;  Daisy,  b  abt  1870  rem  to  Kentucky). 

Q<;  ISRAEL— b  Apl  13,  1770,  in  Haddam,  d  1838  in  Windham  Centre, 
X.  V.,  m  1790  Elizabeth  Posson  (b  Sep  24,  1774)  of  Holland  Patent,  X. 
Y.;  a  pioneer  farmer  at  sixteen  in  New  Durham,  Greene  County,  N.  Y. 
Children— Ira  (b  in  Durham  Sep  21,  1804,  d  at  Smithland,  Ky.,  Feb  12, 
1S45,  unm,  contractor  of  public  works  at  Cairo,  111.),  Elizabeth  (b  Dur- 
ham July  21,  1806,  m  Nov,  1S29,  Nelson  Bump  and  died  Mch  18,  1857, 
leaving  7  children),  Hannah  (b  Durham  July  1,  1808,  d  Bloomington, 
111.,  1S91,  m  Feb  11,  1828,  Mr.  Rogers,  an  early  settler  of  Bloomington, 
who  d  1S71,  and  she  m  again  and  survived  second  husband),  and  Lyman 
Hall  (b  Durham  Aug  1,  1812,  m  abt  1834  Rhoda  Sprague  and  lived  in 
Catskill,  X.  Y.). 

Q'  MOSES— b  in  1776  in  Haddam,  m  Abigail  Titus  of  same  place. 
Children— Phoebe  (b  1808,  m  Francis  Norwood  and  had  Hiram,  Cor- 
nelia, Nancy,  Emory,  Electa,  Irving  and  Hubbard),  Lorenzo  (m  Jan  14, 
1S33,  Evaline  Vandyck,  lived  at  Alcatraz  Island,  Cal.,  d  there  Oct  3, 
187 1,  a  surgeon  in  U.  S.  Army,  leaving  Charles  G.,  who  had  a  son 
Charles  G.,  Van  Dyek,  Elizabeth  and  Evaline),  Nancy  (d  unm  at  Sau- 
gerties,  N.  Y.),  Electa  (b  181 2,  Broome  Co.,  N.  Y.,  m  Frederick  Stew- 
art, d  at  Breakabeen,  N.  Y.,  leaving  Abigail  Harriet,  Lorenzo,  Richard 
and  Martin),  Ruth  (b  1S16,  mDatus  Rugg,  lived  at  Oak  Hill,  X.  Y.,  and 
din  N.  Y.  City),  Paul  (m  Elizabeth  Dominick  at  Gallupville,  X.  Y..  and 


288  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

had  Dominick  and  Socrates,  who  m  Helen  Wheelock  of  Montrose,  N.  }., 
lives  in  Brooklyn,  N,  Y.),  Lucia  Hyde  (b  1822,  m  Solomon  B.  Smith 
and  had  Edward  Hubbard  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line);  Julia,  who 
m  John  M.  Peters  and  lives  at  Dunlap,  Iowa;  Mary,  who  m  Charles 
White  and  lives  at  Hartland,  N.  Y.,  and  Emma,  who  m  Dr.  Francis 
Norwood  and  lived  in  Kingston,  N.  Y.,"  where  he  died  in  1893), 
Socrates  (b  abt  1824,  d  June  11,  1887,  m  Sophie  Snowden  of  Philadel- 
phia and  had  Snowden,  Walter,  Mary,  Arthur,  Richard  and  Willie), 
Eliza  (m  Newton  Bump,  Durham,  N.  Y.,  lived  in  Hudson,  111.,  and  had 
Adelaide  and  Rosaline),  and  Mary  (b  1826,  d  1845  at  Windham,  N.  Y.) 

SON    OF    JEREMIAH    AND    ALICE    (SHALER)     HUBBARD. 

Q8  JEREMIAH— b  Jan  29,  1746,  in  Haddam,  d  Aug  23,  1808,  in  Crom- 
well, Middlesex  Co.,  Ct.,  where  he  came  in  winter.of  1793-4  and  was 
recommended  for  communion  in  1794  in  First  Congregational  Church, 
Ebenezer  May,  Pastor;  there  elected  deacon  Dec  14,  1807,  m  Nov 
11,  1736,  Flora  Hazelton,  dau  Simon  and  Rebecca  Hazelton,  of  Haddam. 
Children — Rufus  (b  in  Haddam  1770,  d  Jan  14,  1S35,  m  abt  18 — 
Clarissa  Norton,  b  in  Guilford,  Ct.,  and  had — all  born  in  Upper  Middle- 
ton,  or  Cromwell — Hemau,  AdolpJius,  James,  Milicent,  Catherine,  Julia, 
child — name  unknown — Sarah,  Rufus  and  John  H.,  b  Nov  1,  1805,  d 
Apl  2,  1 868,  m  May  26,  1828,  Anna  Graham,  b  May  30,  1801,  in  Middle 
Haddam,  d  Sep  5,  1867,  in  Cromwell,  and  had  James  E.,  b  May  22,  1829, 
in  Berlin,  Ct.,  d  there  Oct  12,  1829;  Julia  A.,  b  Sep  9,  1831,  in  Berlin,  d 
in  Upper  Middleton  Oct  13,  1840;  Lucy  J.,  b  May  28,  1833,  in  Berlin; 
MaryC.,b  Dec  2,  1835,  in  Berlin;  Ann  E.,  b  Oct  2,  1840, in  Upper  Middle- 
ton,  d  there  June  2, 1841;  Clarissa  E.,  b  Sep  11,  1842,  in  Upper  Middleton; 
Victorine  A.,  b  Dec  17,  1845;  and  John  H.,  b  June  22,  1838,  in  Berlin,  Ct., 
m  at  Charter  Oak,  Iowa,  Sep  4,  1870,  Mary  E.  Atwood  of  Michigan,  b 
Mch  25,  1853,  and  had  Anna  M.,  b  Jan  1,  1871,  d  June  21,  1871;  J.  E. 
Dow,  b  Apl  3,  1872;  Clara  A.,  b  Aug  1,  1874;  Lucy  J.,  b  Aug  28,  1876; 
Willie  G.,  b  July  10,  1880;  Mary  A.,  b  Sep  5,  1882;  Joseph  Grant,  b  Sep 
11,  1885;  Victorine  A.,  b  Oct  5,  1887;  Harriet  J.,  b  Mch  11,  1890;  and 
Fannie  A.,  b  Apl  17,  1892),  Jeremiah  (b  1771,  d  in  Haddam  J  id  y  14, 
1790),  Simon  (b  1773,  d  Apl  10,  1838,  m  1799  Chloe  Williams,  dau  Jehiel 
and  Ann  (Edwards)  Williams  of  Cromwell  and  had  11  children,  one  of 
whom,  Jeremiah,  was  born  May  22,  1800,  d  Apl  4,  1856,  m  Mch  16,  1825, 
Elizabeth  Roberts,  b  Dec  8,  1803,  d  June  23,  1870,  dau  Wickham  Rob- 
erts, and  had  10  children),  Alice  (b  1776,  d  Apl  28,  1798),  Susannah  (b 
1778,  d  Dec  7,  1799),  Q9  George  (see  elsewhere),  Flora  (b  1783,  d  May 
9,  1803),  Catharine  (b  1785,  d  Sep  7,  1807),  Asa  E.  (b  Apl  28,  1788,  d 
May  9,  1849,  belonged  to  Upper   Houses    Debating  Society,   organized 


4* 


HON.    SAMUEL    DICKINSON    HUBBARD 
of  Middletown,  Ct. 

United   States  Postmaster  General   under  President  Fillmore. 
(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown.  Ct.) 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  MIDDLE  TOWN,  CT.         2Sg 

Dec  20,  180S,  called,  two  years  later,  Friendly  Association;  many 
who  afterward  became  prominent  in  life  received  their  intellectual  dis- 
cipline in  it;  Asa  E.  Hubbard  was  seldom  absent  from  its  meetings; 
he  m  Lucy  Kirby  and  had  Frederick,  Jennie,  William,  Ralph  and 
Fannie),  Bathsheba,  twin  to  Asa  E.  (b  Apl  28,  1788,  d  Apl,  1876,  m 
Joseph  Beaumont*  of  Cromwell  and  had  Edmund  Bray.,  John  Booth, 
Flora  A .,  Hannah  and  Mary  E. 

SON    OF    JEREMIAH    AND    FLORA    (HAZELTON)    HUBBARD. 

Q9  GEORGE— b  Jan  29,  1781,  d  Oct  29,  1833,  m  Nov  19,  1809,  Electa 
Bronson,  d  Sep,  1863,  lived  in  Cromwell.  Children — Flora  Elmira  (b 
Aug  27,  1810,  d  Dec  2,  1822),  Eliza  Bronson  (b  Apl  2,  1813,  d  Aug  15, 
1865,  m  Jan  28,  1829,  Elisha  Leffingwell  Sage  (b  Mch  31,  1809,  d  Dec  2, 
1883,  and  had  Orren  Bronson,  Martha  Antoinette,  Elizabeth  Maria, 
George  Hubbard,  Elisha  William,  Elisha  Thomas,  infant  child  d  y,  and 
Frank  Butler),  Antoinette  Almira  (b  Sep  15, 1815,  d  Nov  1, 1878,  m  Sep 
15,  1836,  David  C.Brooks  and  had  George, James,  Thomas,  Charles,  Mary 
and  Frank),  Flora  Jennett  (b  Nov  12,  181 7,  d  June  19,  1818),  Jane 
Louise  (b  Sep  2,  1821,  d  June  21,  1882,  m  Apl  4,  1843,  James  H.  Kibbee 
and  had  Alice,  Jennie,  Lizzie  and  John),  George  (b  Aug  4,  1824,  d  Aug 
29,  1824),  Thomas  Scranton  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line),  Susannah 
Jennett  (b  Dec  7,  1827,  m  Lauren  T.  Merriam,  of  Dixon,  111.,  and  had 
Jane,  Edgar,  Frank  and  Lauren),  and  Julia  Maria  (b  Feb  15,  1830,  m 
(1)  John  L.  Kibbee,  (2)  Humphrey  Harsh,  of  Warren,  Ohio). 

SON    OF    THOMAS    AND    ELIZABETH    (SNOW)    HUBBARD. 

qio  THOMAS— b  in  Haddam,  Ct.,  in  1738,  d  there  June  6,  1803,  m  Nov 
(>.  1 771,  Sarah  Boardman,  b  1752,  d  in  Haddam  1829.  Children — Zeriah 
(bap  Oct,  1774,  m  Joseph  Mills),  Hannah  (bap  1777,  m  (1)  Eliphalet 
Smith,  (2)  William  Smith),  Jemima  (b  abt  1778,  m  Hazael  Smith), 
Jerusha  (bap  June,  1780,  m  David  Smith),  Daniel  (bap  Feb,  1782), 
Samuel  Boardman  (bap  June,  1784),  Damaris  (bap  Jan,  1787,  m  Jona- 
than Burr),  Julianna  (b  abt  1788,  m  Elisha  Clark),  Sarah  (b  abt  1790, 
m  Ezra  Kelsey),  Elizabeth,  twin  (b  abt  1790,  m  Comfort  Ranney), 
M  \kiv  (b  abt  1793,  m  (1)  Herman  Brainerd,  (2)  Matthew  Hubbard),  and 
Amasa,  second  child  (bap  Sep,  1775,  m  (1)  Elizabeth  Burr,  (2)  Deborah 
Coates,  (3)  Hannah  Hubbard,  dau  David,  and  had  Samuel,  b  abt  1802, 
dy;  Clarissa,h  abt  1805,  m  Joseph  Arnold;    Tho mas,  b  abt  1 806 ;  Samuel, 

♦James  and  Joseph   Beaumont  came  from  Derby,  near  Waketield,   Yorkshire,    Em:.,  and 
former,  the  eldest,  established  one  of  the  first  cotton  mills  in  Massachusetts  at  Canton,  and  OOD 
Mulcted  himself  much  of  the  machinery.     Joseph   Beaumont,  Asa   Hubbard.  Horace  Stockil  - 
Justus  Stocking  constructed  a  mill  for  the  manufacture  of  cotton  cloth  at  now  Cromwell,  Midi 
County,  Ct.,  about  1813,  which  partnership  was  called  the  Nooks  Manufaci  a.  ing  Company. 


290  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AXD   GENEALOGY. 

b  abt  1808,  Columbia  Coll,  physician,  lived  in  New  York  City,  m  Mary 
Hustace  and  had  Walter,  b  abt  1S51,  m  Helen  Valentine  of  New  York 
and  had  Ernest  and  Edith;  Emily,  b  abt  1853;  Samuel,  b  abt  1S53, 
physician,  m  Bessie  Van  Winkle  of  New  York  and  had  William;  and 
William,  b  abt  1S59,  d  1SS4;  Jonathan,  b  abt  1810,  Princeton  Coll,  Rev,  lived 
in  Granville,  N.  Y.,  m  Mary  Fish  and  had  Jane,  Frederick  and  Martha- 
Daniel,  b  abt  1S12,  d  1835;  and  Alburn,  b  abt  1816,  lived  in  Haddam,  m 
(1)  Cynthia  Bonfoey,  (2)  Mary  Smith  and  had  Eleanor,  Frank,  Florence 
and  Frederick). 

SONS    OF    SAMUEL    AXD    SARAH    (K.IRBY)     HUBBARD. 

R-  SAMUEL— b  in  Hartford  Mch  27,  1678,  d  in  Farming-ton,  Ct.,  May 
19,  1745,  m  Nov  1,  1700,  Martha  Peck,  b  July  2,  1679,  d  Oct  19,  1752,  dau 
Eliezur  Peck  of  Wallingford,  Ct.  Both  were  members  of  the  Farming- 
ton  Church  in  Feb,  1 718-19.  Both  tombstones  are  yet  standing  in  the 
Berlin  Cemetery.  SAMUEL'S  will  is  dated  Apl  15,  1743,  and  mentions 
among  others  his  grandsons  William  Hubbard,  "  only  son  of  my  son 
William  Hubbard,"  and  Mathew  Cole.  Children — R5  William  (see  else- 
where), Sarah  (b  Jan  18,  1702-3,  m  June  S,  1726,  Joseph  Francis), 
RG  Samuel  (see  elsewhere),  Timothy  (b  Dec  15,  1707,  m  Betsey  Leonard 
and  had  Timothy,  b  1732,  m  (1)  Abigail  Deming  (2)  Letitia  Beckley  and 
had   Elizabeth    b    1775,  Allen   b    1777,    Abraham   b  1779,  m    Lucretia 

Bridges,  and   Lettie  b   17S3),   Ruth   (b  Apl  3,    17 10,   m  Cole), 

R7  Watts  (see  elsewhere)  and  Thomas,  twin  (b.  May  14,  1714,  d  Dec  1. 
1742). 

R3  GEORGE*— bin  Hartford  Dec  29,  16S0,  d  in  Berlin  Sep  19,  1751,  m 
Mercy  Seymour,  b  Jan  14,  16S3,  d  Feb  8,  1730-31,  dau  Capt  Richard 
Seymour,  whose  was  the  first  burial  in  Berlin  in  the  ground  he  donated 
for  the  cemetery;  they  lived  in  Great  Swamp  Parish,  near  Farmington, 

and  occupied  the  "  3d  seat  from  the  pulpit."     He  m  (2)  Eunice , 

b  1 7 14,  d   Dec,  1752.     His  signature  is  herewith  given  in  fac  simile; 

Children — R3  Richard  (see  elsewhere),  Mercy  (born  June  25,  1 7 15), 
R11  George  (see  elsewhere),  Gideon  (b  July  12,  17 1 7,  d  July  28,  1717), 
Thankful,   (b  July   23,   1719,  m    Mch    2,     1737,  Joseph  Smith,  Jr.,  and 

:;  In  U!S  Samuel  Hubbard,  Samuel  Galpin,  Joseph  Harris,  John  Gilbord,  and  George  Hubbard 
petitioned  the  General  Assembly  for  release  "from  ministerial  or  parish  charge  in  Middletown,  and 
be  annexed  to  the  Great  Swamp  Society,"  which  was  agreed  to.  The  petition  is  extant,  signed  by  the 
petitioners.  The  signature  of  George  Hubbard  is  given  in  fac  zii>til< .  because  of  its  remarkable  resem- 
b.anee  to  that  of  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford.  Ct. 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  MIDDLE  TOWN,  CT.         2gi 

had  Elnathan,  b  Nov  23,  1738,  who  had  Joseph  Lee  Smith,  b  May  28, 
1779,  who  m  Aug  25,  1806,  Frances  Kirby,  b  Apl  6,  1785,  d;m  fudge 
Ephraim  Kirby  of  Litchfield,  Ct.,  and  Ruth  Marvin,  whose  son,  Edmund 
Kirby  Smith,  b  May  16,  1824,  was  a  General  in  the  Confederate  Army). 
R4JOHN— b  in  Hartford  in  Aug,  1691,  d  in  Bloomfield,  Ct.,  Feb  14, 
1775,  m  hi  Oct,  17 15,  Agnes  (Spencer)  Humphries,  1)  1688,  d  Apl  11, 
[773,  dau  Samuel  Spencer  and  widow  of  Nathaniel  Humphries  of  Hart- 
ford. About  1721  JOHN  settled  on  the  east  side  of  Talcott  Mountain 
in  Simsbury,  Ct.  (annexed  to  Bloomsbury  in  1743),  and  about  174011c* 
rem  to  Windsor  (now  Bloomfield).  In  1859  his  house  was  yet  in  pos- 
session of  his  descendants.  Children— Hannah  (b  Dee  25,  17 16), 
Agnes  b  171S,  m  Joab  Centre),  Abigail  (b  Jan  19,  1718-19,  m  Dec  11, 
1740,  Jonathan  Gillett),  Rio  John  (see  elsewhere),  R"  Nathaniel  (see  else- 
where), Mary  (b  1725),  and  Elizabeth  (b  1727). 

SONS    OF    SAMUEL    AND    MARTHA    (PECK)    HUBBARD. 

R5  WILLIAM— b  in  Kensington,  Ct,  Mch  3,  1701,  d  there  in  early 
life  (will  on  file  in  Hartford,  Ct.,  is  dated  Aug  31.  1736).  He  lived  in 
Berlin,  Ct.,  also  in  Champion,  Jefferson  Co.,  N.  V.,  awhile,  and   m   (1) 

M  ibel    Kelsey,  (2)  Elizabeth  ,  b    1732,  d   in   Berlin   May  20,  1792. 

Children— Sarah,  Ruth,  William,  Zenas,  Levi  who  m  Polly  Clark, 
Elizabeth,  Cyrus,  Ira,  Elijah,  William,  Harlow,  Elizabeth,  who  m 
Asa  Frink,  Hiram,  Heman  whom  Louisa  Frink,  Moses  who  m  Margaret 
Norton,  and  Samuel  who  m  Jerusha  Ensign). 

R,J  SAMUEL— b  in  Farmington,  Ct.,  Oct  4,  1704,  d  there  in  1777,  m 
Jan  27,  1 73 1,  Joanna  Judd,  b  Oct  16,  1709,  dau  Benjamin  and  Susannah 
(North)  Judd.  Children— Samuel  (b  1736,  d  Aug  23,  1813,  m  fane 
Higbee  and  had  S//scr//  b  1773;  Samuel,  b  about  1775,  m  Phebe  Hatch  of 
lin  and  had  Samuel  b  abt  1806,  m  Frances  Restell,  rem  to  Mont- 
gomery, Ala.,  and  had  Mary,  Samuel,  Ebenezer,  Charles,  William.  Lois. 
Fanny,  and  Ellen;  Isaac,  b  abt  1778;  Rhoda,  b  abt  1780;  and  Sylvester, 
■  1783,  m  Catherine  Meggatt  and  had  Samuel,  Bertha,  Sylvester  and 
Mary.  R'~  Adijaii  (see  elsewhere),  Jemima  (b  abt  1742,  m  Apl  2.  1772, 
Daniel  Edwards,  bap  in  Cromwell,  Ct.,  Feb  n,  1744,  son  of  Churchill 
and  Abigail  Edwards),  Thomas  (1)  1741),  Zi  \  vs  (b  1740),  Rosanna  (b 
1753,  d  in  Cromwell  Oct  1.  1795,  m  David  Edwards,  Jr.,  bap  Dec  24, 
1794,  son  of  David  and  Mary  Edwards),  and  L\i>i\  (1.  [749,  m  Apl  2, 
1772.  Joseph   Stow,  b  Mch  31,  1745,  son  of  Joseph  and  Sarah  (Bulkley) 

Stow). 

A  history  of  BloomfieM  by  Mrs.  Elizabeth  G  Warner  relates  thai  in  1760  Deacon  Abel  Gillett 
withdrew  from  the  first  church  with  his  followers  and  formed  a  newseel  (called  "separatists  "first 
and  afterward  "baptists,")  because  his  pastor.  Rev.  llezekiah  Bissell,  would  nut  take  sides  with  him, 
but  remained  neutral  in  a  quarrel  he  had  with  John  Eubbard. 


292  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

R7  WATTS— b  May  14,  17 14,  d  Mch  10,  1802,  m  Mary  Stanley,  b 
1 7 19,  d  June  13,  1 80 1,  members  of  Hartford  church,  also  lived  in  New 
Britain  and  Meriden;  one  of  a  list  of  petitioners  to  General  Assembly 
for  a  new  church  in  1745.  About  1756  he  was  living  in  Middletown, 
Ct.  In  1768  he  bought  land  in  Hartwood,  [N.  Y.?]  Mass.  In  1800  he  rem  to 
Windsor,  Vt.  Children — Elisha  (b  abt  1750,  called  Ensign,  m  Susan- 
nah Corey,  b  1752,  d  Oct  10,  1777,  leaving  two  children  who  lived  in 
Charlestown,  N.  H.),  R13  Watts  (see  elsewhere),  Eldad  (b  abt  1755,  Rev 
soldier,  m  Prudence  Lee  and  had  Lucy,  Sylvester,  John  and  Mary), 
Ozias  (b  1758,  d  Aug  21,  1808),  Hannah  (b  1760,  d  Jan  15,  i785),Asahel 

(b  1761,  d  Dec  28,  1782),  Mary  (b  abt  1762,  m  Evans,  (2)  Joseph 

Barrett),  and  Rhoda  (b  abt  1764,  m  Joseph  Thompson). 

SONS    OF    GEORGE    AND    MERCY    (SEYMOUR)    HUBBARD. 

R8  RICHARD— b  Sep  5,  1713,  d  May  3,  1795,  m  Jan  2,  1736,  (1) 
Elizabeth  Lee  (b  1716,  d  Apl  27,  1747),  and  Apl  28,  1748,  m  (2)  Sarah 
Beckley  (b  June  27,  1728,  d  Mch  24,  1778);  he  lived  in  Middletown  and 
Berlin  (deacon),  joined  church  with  wife  Sarah  at  Kensington  Parish, 
near  Farmington,  Oct  3,  1756.  Children  (by  Elizabeth  Lee) — Mary  (b 
Dec  29,  1736,  d  y),  Elizabeth  (b  July  23,  1740),  Mary  (b  Apl  12, 1745,  d 
May  2,  1748),  Jonathan  (b  Oct  25,  1742,  called  Lieut.,  lived  in  Berlin,  d 
Mch  20,  1813,  m  Feb  3,  1763,  Katharine  Roberts,  b  1741,  d  Apl  28,  1815, 
and  had  Sarah  b  Nov  7,  1763,  d  Jan  29,  1779;  Katharine,  b  Sep  28,  1765; 
Jonathan,  b  Aug  28,  1767,  d  July  13,  1 78(F)  Richard,  b  Jan  25,  1770; 
Benjamin,  b  Sep  21,  1772,  d  Jan  29,  1776;  Benjamin,  b  Feb  4,  1776,  d 
May  11,  1814;  Lemuel,  b  Mch  19,  1778,  d  Feb  21,  1824,  m  Elizabeth 
■ ;  and  Jonathan,  b  July  1,  1784,  d  Feb  9,  1788). 

R9  GEORGE— b  July  12,  1717,  d  in   Farmington  (now  Berlin),  Ct., 

Nov  26,  1775,  m   Lyclia  (b   1755,  d  Aug  29,  1779),  and  lived  in 

Berlin,  Ct.;  received  from  Hartford  church  into  Kensington  Parish 
church  Aug  8,  1756.  'He  was  an  active  business  man  and  a  member  of 
the  Friendly  Association  of  Upper  Houses.  Children — Sarah  (b  — , 
d  in  Wallingford,  m  Nov  17,  1766,  Dr.  Raphael  Hurlbut;  he  d  in  Spring- 
field, Ohio,  June  16,  1822),  and  George  (b  1755,  d  in  Berlin  1845,  m  (1) 
Rhoda  Cole  b  1755,  d  in  Berlin  May  30,  1785,  (2)  Lydia  Wright  b  1763, 
d  in  Berlin  Sep  29,  1797,  and  had  Lydia,  (3)  Emily  Burritt  and  had 
Henry  and  Emily.  Children  by  Rhoda  Cole:  Otis,  Lois,  Julia  and 
George — b  May  12,  1785,  d  Sep  11,  1844,  m  Jan  17, 1808,  (1)  Julia  Porter 
b  May  12,  1791,  d  Aug  8,  1823,  dau  Elijah  Porter,  and  had  Walter  B,  b 
1818,  d  Oct  25, 1822,  and  Frederick,  b  1825,  d  Feb  3,  1826;  and  m  June 
20,  1824,  (2)  Lucy  Savage,  b  Aug  18,  1790,  d  in  Cromwell  June  9,  1880, 
dau  Nathaniel  and  Mary  (Stow)  Savage). 


WILLIAM    HENRY    HUBBARD, 

Manufacturer.   Duluth.  Minn. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.) 


293 


294  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AXD   GENEALOGY. 

Sons    OF    JOHN    AND    AGNES    (SPENCER-HUMPHRIES)    HUBBARD. 

R10  JOHN — b  in  Hartford,  Ct,  Apl  25,  1721,  d  Nov  24,  1760,  m  Han- 
nah Cadwell*  (b  1729,4  May  5,  1796),  dau  Thomas  and  Hannah  Cad- 
well  of  Hartford,  and  lived  in  Bloomfield  (Windsor),  Ct.  The  Winton- 
bury  records  show  that  in  1754  he  had  slaves,  viz.  :  "  Died — Fortune,  a 
negro  servant  who  belonged  to  John  Hubbard,  Jr.,  and  a  little  before 
his  death  was  Jona.  Smith's."  Children — Hannah  (b  Nov  16,  1746, 
m  Anthony  Filley),  R11  John  (see  elsewhere),  R13  Timothy  (see  else- 
where), Deidamia  (b  Apl  17,  1754,  m  Jacob  Loomis),  (?)  Joab  (b  Aug 
16,  1758)  and  Oliver  (b  Apl  16,  1761,  m  —  and  had  Silvia  bap  Sep  28, 
17S8;  Wealthy  bap  Aug  u,  1793;  Flavia  bap  May  4,  1794;  Oliver 
Kellogg-  bap  June,  1796;  John  Flavel  bap  June  24,  1798,  rem  to  X.  V. 
State  ;  Thomas  Jefferson  bap  June  10,  1804;  Simeon  Edwards  bap  Aug 
10,  1806  ;  and  Anna  Sophia  bap  July  3,  1808,  m  Mch  25,  1S24,  Edward 
Medcalf  of  East  Hartford);  widow  Hannah  (Cadwell)  Hubbard  m  Jan 

19,  1764,  Jonathan  Palmer  of  Whirlwind  Hill,  Bloomfield,  and  had  Jona- 
than (b   July  14,    1766),  Jehiel   (b  June    17,   1768),  and   Ezekiel   (b   Feb 

7,  177°)- 

Rii  XATHAXIELf— b  1724,  d  Nov  16,  1773,  m  Mary  Cadwell  (b  1731, 
d  Apl  25,  1804),  of  West  Hartford  ;  lived  in  Bloomfield.  Children— Na- 
thaniel (b  Oct  24,  1750,  m  Xov  28,  1770,  Dolly  Cole,  b  1786, djan  19,  1S20, 
and  had  Nathaniel  b  Jan  31,  1773,  d  Mch  14,  1774;  Nathaniels  Apl  30, 
1775,  m  Sarah  Phelps  and  had  Hector,  James,  Harriet, Jane  and  Emily; 
Theodore  bap  Aug  24,  1777,  d  July  22,  1800;  Dolly  (or  Dorothy)  bap 
Sep  24,  1780,  m  Xov  26,  1800,  John  F.  Waters;  Frederick  bap  Aug  17, 
1783,  m  Helen  Brown  and  had  Anson  and  Harvey;  and  Chloe  bap  June 
24,  1792),  Agnes  (b  July  9,  1752,111  Mch  17,  1768,  Ebenezer  Centre  of 
West  Hartford  and  rem  to  Granville,  Mass),  R'0AsA(see  elsewhere), 
Deidamia  (b  1754),  Mary  (b  Aug  17,  1755),  Abigail  (b  1756,  m  Moses 
Drake),  (?)  Joais  (b  Aug  16,1758),  Frederick  (bap  1762  ?),  and  Dosethius 
(bap  Sep  30,  1764,  m  —  and  had  Dosethius,  bap  Sep  21,  1788,  Trumbull, 
Nathaniel,  Alvan,  Orrin  and  Laura). 

SOX    OK    SAMUEL    AND    JOHANNA    (jUI>I>)     HUBBARD. 

R'2  ABIJAH — b  Oct  4,  1741,  died  in  Berlin,  Ct.,  Feb   19,  1S14,  m  Dec 

20,  1764,  Achsah  Beckley  (b  Jan  25,  1743,  d  July  3,  181 2),  dau  John  and 
Mary  (Woodruff)  Beckley.  Children— Abijah  (b  1764,  d  Aug  2,  1789, 
John  (b  1768,  d  in  Berlin  Apl  25,  1845,111  Catharine  King,  b  1774,  d  Xov 
26,  1S24),  James  (b  1769),  Sarah  (b  Feb  2,  1780,  d  June  13,  1867,  m  Oct 

*  A  Douglas  Hubbard  recoid  cives  nannati  Filley. 

t  Records  of  John  an. I  NutLaniel's  children  not  absolutely  reliable. 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  MIDDLE  TOWN,  CT.         295 

29,  1798,  (1)  Agathus  Hurl  but,  b  June  28,  1776,  son  of  Raphael  and 
Sarah  (Hubbard)  Hurlbut,  and  m  Aug  28,  1833  (2)  Abijah  Porter), 
R17  Harvey  (see  elsewhere),  and  Polly  (b  1785,  d  unra). 

SON    OF    WATTS    AND    MARY    (STANLEY)    HUBBARD. 

Ri3  WATTS— b  Oct  10,  1753,  d  Jan  24,  1826,  m  Oct  1,  1782,  Lois 
Corey  (b  June  3,  1760,  d  Mch  25,  1S37)  of  Windsor,  Vt.  Children — 
Phineas*(dMc1i  8,  1783,  d  Sep  2,  1853,  m  Nov  5,  1827,  Mary  Shattuck), 
Betsey  (b  Jan  30,  1785,  d  Nov  20,  1875,  m  Feb  14,  1837,  Reuben  B. 
Brown),  Asahel  (b  in  Meriden,  Ct.,  Jan  8,  1787,  d  in  Mahaska  County, 
Iowa,  in  a  surveyor's  camp  150  miles  from  any  human  habitation,  after- 
ward buried  in  Davenport,  Iowa,  Sep  iS,  1845,  m  at  Windsor,  Vt.,  Dec  7, 
1S15,  Cinthia  Smith — b  Sep  29,  1793,  d  May  6,  1853,  dau  Rev.  Samuel 
Smith  of  Derby, Vt.  He  moved  in  1 800  into  what  was  then  called  "The  Xew 
State,"  settling  at  Windsor,  Vt.  In  1S13  Asahel  and  his  older  brother, 
Phineas,  were  engaged  in  a  mercantile  business  at  Windsor,  where  they 
also  kept  a  tavern,  Asahel  making  two  trips  a  year  with  a  double  ox 
team  to  Boston  to  buy  supplies  for  their  store.  In  1828  Asahel  invented 
and  received  a  patent  for  a  rotary  pump,  which  was  adapted  for  houses 
or  for  larger  uses  in  factories,  water  works,  etc.  For  over  ten  years  he 
manufactured  these  pumps  in  all  sizes.  They  were  also  made  into  fire 
engines,  on  the  same  rotary  principle  of  a  series  of  leather  cups  inside  a 
nder,  sucking  the  water  up,  and  forcing  it  out  through  a  "goose 
neck."  One  house  pump  that  was  made  in  about  1840  is  still  in  constant 
use  in  New  Haven,  Ct.  The  business  was  carried  on  under  a  corpora- 
tion known  as  "  The  National  Hydraulic  Company,"  with  factory  at 
Proctorsville,  Vt.,  and  afterward  at  the  State  Prison  in  Windsor,  where 
Asahel  was  warden.  He  also  made  guns  at  the  prison,  in  partnership 
with  his  son-in-law,  Nicanor  Kendall.  The  pumps,  guns  and  fire  en- 
gines  were  sold  all  over  the  United  States,  in  all  principal  places, 
Asahel  being  salesman  and  traveling  quite  extensively.  In  1S30  oneof 
the  large  rotary  pumps  was  furnished  the  city  of  St.  Louis  for  its  water 
works.  It  was  propelled  by  a  steam  engine  of  twenty  horse  power, 
drawing  water  from  the  Mississippi,  and  forcing  it  through  1,300  feet  of 
iron  pipe,  supplying  the  reservoir,  104  feet  above  the  level  of  the  river. 
In  part  payment  for  this  pump,  a  collection  was  taken  up  by  the  Chamber 
-mmerce  of  St.  Louis,  to  make  up  what  the  city  authorities  could 
not  pay  at  that  time,  but  this  was  not  quite  sufficient,  so  Asahel  took  a 
white  horse  in  settlement,  which  horse  he  drove  across  the  prairie  to 
Chicago,  thence  took  it  by  steamboat  through  the  lakes  to  the  Erie 
Canal  as  far  as  Albany,  and  then  over  the  hills  to  Windsor,  Vt.  The 
old  settlers   of   Windsor  still  remember  this  old   white    horse.     While 


*See  panu  440  under  Misceliam  litional  data. 


296  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

West  on  business  Asa h  el  was  pleased  with  the  appearance  of  Daven- 
port, Iowa,  and  entered  up  a  quarter  section  for  settlement.  In  1839 
he  sold  out  his  business  in  Windsor  and  settled  down  as  a  farmer,  "away 
out  West  "  in  Iowa.  He  afterward  went  out  as  a  leader  of  a  party  of 
surveyors,  executing  a  contract  for  surveying  government  land.  He 
had  children  Cohnan  Smith,  b  Sep  16,  181 6,  in  Windsor,  Vt.,  d  May  14, 1877, 
m  Jan  13,  1845,  Mary  Platts  Read,  b  in  Chester,  Ct,  Apl  2,  182 1,  dau  of 
David  and  Hannah  (Spencer)  Read,  of  Deep  River,  Ct.,  and  had  Harlan 
Page  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line),  George  David  Read,*b  Feb  20, 
1857,  at  Painted  Post,  N.  Y.,  m  May  1,  1882  Mrs.  Sarah  Maria  (Hos- 
mer)  Hawkes,  dau  of  George  and  Sarah  (Lathrop)  Hosmer  of  Spring- 
field, Mass.,  and  had  Carlton  Spencer,  b  Jan  4,  1884,  and  Nelson 
Eugene,  b  Nov  18,  1885  ;  Charles  Asahel,  b  Mch  28,  1861,  d  Aug  17, 
1861;  and  Alida  Helen,  b  in  New  Haven,  Ct.,  Sep  21,  1862,  m  Nov  21, 
1881,  Howard  W.  Durand  of  New  Haven,  Ct.,  and  had  Jessie  Mary,  b 
Nov  17,  1883,  Dexter  William,  bOct  12,  1S85  ;  Harold  Colman,  b  Oct  27, 
1888,  and  Stella  Maria,  b  Aug  10,  1891;  Colman  Smith  Hubbard  was  in 
his  younger  days  a  skilled  mechanic,  and  after  superintending  in  the 
pump  factory  of  his  father  at  Windsor,  and  being  assistant  warden  in 
the  prison,  he  went  to  Deep  River,  Conn,  to  make  the  pumps,  under  a 
contract  with  Ezra  Williams,  who  had  bought  the  State  right.  It  was 
here  he  was  married,  his  eldest  son  being  the  publisher  of  this  gene- 
alogy. When  this  boy  was  still  in  dresses,  Mr.  Hubbard  slipped  on  the 
ice  and  was  laid  up  for  several  years.  This  accident  changed  the  whole 
course  of  his  life,  as,  being  obliged  to  take  tip  lighter  employment,  he 
canvassed  Middlesex  County  for  books,  magazines,  &c.  Having  the 
exclusive  agency  for  "  Uncle  Tom's  Cabin,"  he  sold  over  2000  copies  in 
the  county.  In  1S55  he  gave  up  his  book  store  and  removed  with  his 
family  to  Painted  Post,  N.  Y.,  where  he  was  bookkeeper  and  cashier 
for  Bissell,  Stevens  &  Co.,  a  large  lumber  concern.  In  i860  he  returned 
to  New  England  and  occupied  a  similar  position  with  Eli  Whitney,  as 
secretary  of  the  Whitney  Arms  Co.,  at  New  Haven,  in  the  then  only 
private  gun*  factory  in  the  United  States,  which  was  kept  very  busy 
during  the  Civil  War.  This  position  he  resigned  in  1865  to  go  to  Bos- 
ton, where  he  accepted  a  position  of  trust  with  Wm.  L.  Bradley  (after- 
ward the  Bradley  Fertilizer  Co).  In  1870  he  became  interested  in  the 
American  Timber  &  Mfg.  Co.,  a  corporation  of  New  York,  and  went  to 
Yicksburg,  Miss.,  where  immense  quantities  of  the  finest  black  walnut 
lumber  was  bought  and  milled  under  his  direction  for  the  northern 
market.  In  1875  the  large  gate  of  the  cotton  compress  swung  to  in  a 
gale,  striking  him  on  the  head,  resulting  in  injuries  and  sickness 
which    e\  entually   caused   his   death      He    was   always  noted   for   his 

*  See  pa^e  439  for  additional  data. 


297 


COLMAN    SMITH    HUBBARD 
of   New   Haven,  Ct. 

(Descended  from  George  Bub'oard  of  Middletown,  Ct.) 


29S  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

probity  and  a  fund  of  anecdote  which  with  unfailing  good  humor  made 
him  an  exceedingly  popular  man;  Laura  C.fh  May  24,  1818,  m  Sep 
2,  1S35,  (1)  Nicanor  Kendall  and  (2)  Benjamin  F.  Blood;  Adaline  C,  b 
Mch  19,  1822,  d  in  Davenport,  la.,  June  28,  1846,  m  Jan  23,  1844,  James 
Grant;  Guy  Homer,  b  Mch  10,  1824,  d  Apl  15,  1856,  m  Oct  21,  1851, 
Clarissa  A.  Rice;  Lucy  b  June  23,  1826,  d  Dec  6,  1826;  Lucy  Moulton,  b 
Oct  8,  1827,  m  Sep  30,  1844,  Jared  B.  Hitchcock;  Celia  Lull,  b  June  15, 
1830,  m  Nov  18, 1852,  Rev.  George  W.  Gardner,  D.D.;  and  Cullen,  b  Nov 
24,  1833,  d  Oct  28,  1834),  NANCvf(b  May  24,  1789,  d  1855,  m  Jeremiah 
Hubbard),  Oliver  (b  Mch  28,  1792,  in  Meriden,  Ct.,  d  Jan  14,  1838,  at 
Newport,  N.  H.,  and  buried  in  Windsor,  Vt.),  Isaac  Watts  (see  Abridged 
Descent  Line  William  Henry  Hubbard),  Fanny  (b  Mch  10,  1797,  m  Jan 
1,  1824,  Pearce  Hulett,  who  d  Nov  5,  1856),  Laura  (b  May  10,  1799, 
m  John  Porter),  and  Clarissa  R.  (b  Aug  10,  1802,  m  (1)  Nahum  Swal- 
low and  (2)  John  Parker). 

SONS    OF    JOHN    AND     HANNAH    (CADWELL)    HUBBARD. 

R»  JOHN— b  in  Windsor,  Ct.,  Dec  28,  1748,  d  Sep  11,  1830,  m  June 
■5,  1775,  Susannah  Mills,  b  1757,  lived  in  Bloomfield,  and  was  a  member 
of  General  Assembly  in  1810.  Children — John  (b  in  Windsor  Apl  10, 
1776,  d  Sep  27,  1856  in  Sandusky,  Ohio,  m  Mable  Barnard  of  Turkey 
Hills,  Ct.,  and  had  John  Mills,  b  Mch  4,  1804,  Yale  1838,  studied  medi- 
cine, rem  to  Vicksburg,  Miss,  (or  Arkansas)  d  in  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  and 
had  Sarah,  John,  William  and  Edward;  Maria  Mabel,  b  Feb  17,  1866,  d 
in  Sandusky  the  wife  of  Harmon  Wilcox;  Lester  Samuel,  b  Dec  16, 
1807,  removed  to  Sandusky,  Ohio,  d  there,  m  Jane  Livingston,  and  had 
Livingston,  Lester,  Jane,  Eliza  and  George;  Pamclia  Roxanua,  b  Feb 
14,  1810,  d  unm  in  Bloomfield;  Edivard  Stiles,  b  Dec  29,  1S11,  m 
Harriet  Kirkoff,  rem  to  Sandusky,  d  there,  a  merchant,  and  had  Lester, 
Florence,  Alice,  Sarah,  Harriett  and  Georgianna;  Mary  Lucretia,  b 
Mch  14,  1814,  d  in  Louisiana,  m  Samuel  Oswalt;  Rollin  Barnard,  b  June 
24,  1817,  m  Anne  Massey,  rem  to  Sandusky,  merchant,  lumber  dealer 
and  banker,  and  had  Charles  who  m  Eleanor  Gold,  Mary  who  m  Jacob 
Hosmer,  Rollin  who  m  Lydia  Brewster,  Shannon,  Franklin  and  Alex- 
ander; Sarah  Phelps,  b  Aug  17,  1819,  d  unm  in  Columbus,  Ohio;  Lucius 
Francis,  b  Oct  9,  1822,  m  Margaret  Shumaker,  rem  to  Toledo,  thence  to 
Kansas  City,  Mo.,  where  he  is  engaged  in  the  grain  business,  and  had 
Robert,  Margaret,  Lucius,  Mary  and  Catharine;  and  Miles  Claudius,  b 
Mch  11,  1828),  Joab  (b  Dec  22,  1777,  and  bap  in  Wintonbury  parish  Jan 
18,  1778,  d  Feb  7,  1S55,  m  Dec  2,  1804,  Ruth  Brown,  b  Oct  27,  1783,  d 
Sep  27,  1864,  lived  and  died  in  Bloomfield,  and  had  Joao  Hiram,  Hart- 
ford dry  goods  merchant,  b  abt  1806,  m  Fidelia  C and  had  George 

*  See  page  442  and  t  page  440  for  additional  data. 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  MIDDLE  TOWN,  CT.         299 

Watson,b  Mch  24,  1841,  d  Oct  13,  1893,111  Elizabeth  Sisson,  and  had 
Helen,  Bessie  and  Margerie;  Ruth  Susan,  b  abt  1809,  d  Sep  20,  1824; 
Franklin,  b  abt  1810,  highly  respected  farmer  of  Bloomfield,  d  Apl  [3, 
1886;  Ann  Eggleston,b  abt  1812;  Langdon  Watson,  b  Sep  2,  [816,  d  Sep 

24,  1892,  rem  to  Huron  City,  Mich,  m  Apl,  1X62,  Amanda  J.  Lester, 
and  had  Frank  Watson,  Richard  Langdon  and  Annabel  M.;  Manila,  b 
abt  1818,  d  y;  Manila,  b  abt  1820,  d  June  9,  182;,;  Susan  Victoritie,  b 
abt  1825,  lives  in  Hartford,  Ct.;  and  Jeannette,  b  abt  [826),  and  George 
(b  abt  1780,  d  vSep  26,  1853,  in  Stonington,  Ct.,  Yale  1803,  studied  law, 
rem  to   Norwich,  Ct.,  and  had  George  and  Harnett). 

R'^  TIMOTHY— b  in  (?)  Windsor  Dee  16,  1750,  d  (  >ct  15,  1824,  m  June 
18,  1772,  Sarah  Gillette  (b  Feb  28,  1753,  d  May  31,  1811),  rem  to  New- 
Hampshire  after  (:>)  1799.  Children — Sarah  (b  1773,  d  Oct  6,  1796), 
Timothy  (b  in  Windsor  Aug  17,  1774,  d  Oct  28,  1850,  rem  to  Montpelier, 
Yt.,  r.i  in  i8ci  (1)  Lucy  Davis,  dau  Jacob  Davis  and  in  1839  (2)  Anna 
May),  Hannah  (b  Nov  5,  1776,111  Sayles  Hawley  of  Waterbury,  Yt.), 
Eleanor  (b  Meh  3,  1779),  Rachel  (b  Mch  3,  1781),  R1S  Rookr  (see  else- 
where), Erasti's  (b  May  15,  1786,  d  y),  Chester  (b  Aug  6,  1788,  in 
Wintonbnry,  Ct.,  d  Aug  27,  1832,  in  Montpelier,  m  Aug  24,  1820,  Julia 
Granville  Jewett  (d  June  1,  1881),  dau  Nathan  Jewett,  and  had  Julia  b 
b  Sep  11,1821,  d  Feb  n,  1871,  m  Oct  27,  1845,  James  McMillan  Shatter, 
and  had  three  children;  Timothy  Jewett b  Aug  6,  1823^1  mini  Nov  7, 
1880;  Emma  Grant  b  Apl  17,  1825,  m  Sep  18,  1854,  Anderson  Devereux 
Dieter,  b  in  Baltimore,  Md.;  Ruth  b  Dee  12,  1827,  d  Feb  28,  1844; 
Cluster  b  Feb  18,  1830,  d  Sep  23,  1830;  Chester  b  Jan  31,  1S31,  d  Nov  9, 
1831),  Nancy  (b  Aug  6,  1791,  111  Mr.  Perry  of  Berlin,  Yt),  and  Sherman 
(b  Oet  4,  1794,  d  Sep  6,  1872). 

50N    ok    NATHANIEL    AM)    MARY    (CADWELL)    HUBBARD. 

R1,;  ASA — b  in  Bloomfield  Meh  16,  1753-4,  d  there  Apl  13,  1*43,111  Nov 
20,1776,  Submit  Bishop  (b  1756,  d  Nov  2,  1823).  Children — Submit 
(bap  Feb  16,  1777,111  Deacon  Amos  Gillette  and  had  Amos,  William, 
Frances  and  Clarissa),  Asa  (b  Jan  3,  1779.  d  Meh  15.  1786),  Bishop  (b 
abt  1780,  d  Aug  24,  1823,  m  Sarah  Holcomb  of  Simsbury  and  had  Sarah 
Marcia,bap  July  29,  [821,  m  Homer  Hastings,  Hartford  merchant), 
Benoni  (b  Apl  2,  17S3,  in  Windsor,  Wintonbnry  Parish,  now  Bloomfield, 
d  there  Dec  26,  1S70,  m  Oct  19,  1813,  Abigail  Francis,  dan  Robert 
Francis  of  Wethersfield,  and  had  Freeman  b  Mch  1,  iXiS,  d  mini  [873; 
Henry  b  in  Bloomfield  May  24,  1820,  m  June  29,  [846,  Clarissa  Elizabeth 
House  (d  abt  [868), of  Manchester,  Ct.,  dau  Robert  and  Clarissa  (McKee) 
House,  rem  to  Cal,  Suisin  City,  and  had  Henry  Francis  b  in  Bloomfield 
May  2^   1S4S,   served   in    Rebellion,  lives   in    San    Francisco,   and   Julia 


3oo  HUBBARD   HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

Josephine,  b  Nov  22,  1849,  m  1874  Henry  H.  Bronson;  Abigail  b  1822, 
m  Nov  1842,  Henry  C.  Goodrich,  d  1863-4,  of  Rocky  Hill,  Ct.,  and  1843 
rem  to  Augusta  and  Ring-gold,  Ga.,  and  had  Jasper  H.,  Charles,  and 
fane  Amelia;  Elizabeth  b  Jan  8,  1825;  m  Dr.  Nathaniel  W.  Taylor,  son 
Rev.  Dr.  Nathaniel  W.  Taylor,  founder  Yale  Theological  School;  and 
Anna  b  1827,  d  1886,  m  1853  Benjamin  E.  Yiets  of  Granby,  Ct.,  and  had 
Francis  Hubbard,  Edward  and  Scott),  Augustus  (bap  Jan  29,  1785,  d 
young  man),  Asa  (bap  Apl  30,  1787,  d  July  16,  1808),  Hannah  (bap  Aug 
22,  1788,  m  Thomas  Barber  of  Bloomfield  and  had  Sercpta  and  Elisa- 
beth), Alethea  and  Julia  (youngest  daughters  of  ASA,  never  married), 
Susannah  Hosmer  (bap  June  29,  1800,  d  y). 

SoX    oK    ABIJAH     AND    ACHSAH    (BECKLEY)     HUBBARD. 

R«"  HARYEY—  b  Mch  r,  1782,  d  Aug  7,  1863,  m  Nov  26,  1807,  (1) 
Jennie  Doane  Galpin  of  Berlin,  Ct.,  and  Apl  10,  1825,  (2)  her  sister, 
Huldah  Galpin,  who  had  Emeline  Jennie  (b  Jan  15,  1S26,  m  May  24, 
1847,  Chester  H.  Brown,  b  Mch  9,  1820).  Children  (by  Jennie  Doane 
Galpin) — Edwin  (1)  Jan  18,  1S10,  d  Aug  19,  1S10),  Edwin  (see  Hubbard 
Genealogists),  Emeline  (b  1814,  d  1818),  and  Albert  Wallace  (b  Apl  6, 
1 82 1,  m  Dec  10,  1848,  Georgene  Story). 

SON    of    TIMOTHY    AND    SARAH    (GILLETTE)    HUBBARD. 

R1*  ROGER— b   in  Windsor,  Ct.,  Apl  21,  1783,  d  in  Montpelier,  Vt, 

Nov  15,  1848,  m  Fanny  Burbank  (b  1793,  d  Jan  13, 1S47,  in  Montpelier), 
dau  Silas  Burbank,  Sr.  ROGER  HUBBARD  came  to  Montpelier  in 
1799  with  his  brothers  Timothy  and  Chester  and  engaged  in  mercantile 
pursuits  until  1814  and  then  retired.  In  1822  he  resumed  business  in  a 
new  and  handsome  store  until  1832.  In  Sept,  1814,  he  participated  in 
the  battle  of  Plattsburg  as  a  sergeant,  his  brother  Timothy  being  cap- 
tain of  the  company.  Afterward  he  was  captain  of  the  Washington 
Artillery  and  a  prominent  citizen  of  Montpelier.  Children  (b  in  Mont- 
pelier)— Erastus  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line  John  Erastus  Hubbard), 
George  (b  1813,  d  unmarried  in  Nov  6,  1S83,  in  Brattleboro,  Vt.), 
Gustavus  A.  (b  1815,  d  unm  Aug  22,  1891,  in  Montpelier),  Edwin  (b 
1817,  d  unm  Nov  15,  1837 — killed  by  a  steamboat  explosion  at  Helena, 
Ark.),  Fanny  M.  (b  Oct  9,  1819,  d  Jan  29,  1890,  in  N.  Y.  City,  m  1849 
Martin  M.  Kellogg),  and  Charles  Paink  (b  July  28,  1S25,  d  Aug  1,  1826, 
in  Montpelier). 

SONS    OF    NATHANIEL    AND    MARY    (EARLE)    HUBBARD. 

$2  NATHANIEL— b  in  Middletown  Sep  14,  1690,  d  Oct  14,  1765,  at 
Long  Hill,  Middletown,  m  Apl  12,  17 16,  Sarah  Johnson  (d  1776).     Chil- 


GEORGE  HUBBARD,  OF  MIDDLETOWN,  CT.  301 

dren — Sarah  (b  Feb  11,  17 16-17,  m  Richard  Turner,  2d  wife), 
Nathaniel  (b  Jan  5,  1718-19,  d  Apl  18,  1773,  m  Lucy  Johnson,  rem  to 
Granville,  Mass.,  and  had  Nathaniel,  George,  David,  John,  b  Oct  29,  1758, 
d  May  10,  1837,  m  widow  Susannah  Mitchell,  Titus,  and  Rhoda  m 
Jedediah  Smith),  S5  Nehemiah  (see  elsewhere),  Samuel  (b  Oct  8,  1723, 
rem  to  Granville,  Mass.),  Isaac  (b  Apl  14, 1726,  d  June  28,  1730),  Esther, 
(b  Feb  14,  1727-8,  m  John  Hall),  David  (b  Aug  23,  1730,  "  d  at  Claverick, 
[Columbia  County,  N.  Y.]  in  the  public  service  Oct  14,  1755"),  Mary  (b 

Apl  10,  1733,  m  (') Lawson),  Noadiah  (b  in  Middletown  Mch  14, 

x735-6>  d  there  May  4,  1816,  m  in  1764  Phebe  Fairchild  d  Jan  18,  1895, 
widow  of  Samuel  Crowell,  and  had  Noadiah  b  1 765  m  Eunice  Ward  and  rem 
to  Champion,  Herkimer  County,  N.  Y.,  and  had  Hiram,  Ward,  Horace, 
Maria,Cornelia,  Mary,Parnell  and  Augustus;  and  Samuel,h  in  Middletown 
Feb  23,  1767,  d  Mch  19,  1823,  m  Huldah  Crowell,  d  Nov  4,  1861,  and  had 
Adah,  b  1793,  m  Enoch  Green,  and  had  Augusta  and  Kate;  Phebe,  b 
1795,  m  Ezra  Coe;  Noadiah,  b  1810;  and  Alfred,  b  July  4,  1S03,  d  in 
Middletown  Mch  29,  1890,  m  July  1,  1828,  Julia  Ann  Paddock,  b  Apl  26, 
181 2,  dOct  10,  1888,  and  had  Samuel  m  Caroline  Hubbard,  Maria  E.  m 
Gaston  Tryon  Hubbard,  Frederick  m  Sarah  Hubbard,  Edwin  m  Mary 
Sears,  Augusta  m  James  Ferree,  Helen  m  Wilbur  Burrows,  Robert 
Paddock  m  Margaret  Kelsey,  and  Frank  m  Ida  May  Chaffee. 

g3  JOHN— b  Nov  28,  1692,  deacon  of  First  Middletown  Church  from 
May  26, 1743, until  death,  Mch  12,  1753,  m  Aug  1, 1722,  Elizabeth  Stowe, 
(b  1688,  d  in  Middletown  May  9,  1804).  Children— John  Earle  (b  May 
12,  1723,  deacon  same  church  from  Aug  16,  1765,  until  death  July  27, 
1782,  m  Anna  Stowe  and  had  John,  EpJiraim,  Anna,  Rhoda  and  Lydid), 
A\i<>s(b  Jan  11,  1725),  Stephen  (b  June  21,  1725,  called  "  captain  "  on 
tombstone,  d  in  Middletown  June  7,  1778),  Elizabeth,  b  Apl  18,  1729,  d 
unm  in  Middletown  ?),  Jonathan  (b  Dec  30,  1730),  S6JKRFMIAH  (see 
elsewhere),  Benjamin  (b  Jan  31,  1735),  Martha  (b  Apl  18,  1737,  m  Mch 
7,  1757,  Elisha  Brainerd),  Jabez  (b  June  2,  1739,  d  June  29,  174^).  Jabez 
(b  Apl  7,  1743,  d  in  Middletown— tombstone  inscription  illegible),  and 
Jemima  (b  May  16,  1744,  d  in  Middletown  in  Jan,  1769). 

S4  EBENEZER— b  Oct  2,  1696,  d  in  Middlcfield,  Ct.,  Mch  30,  1776, 
m  Feb  25,  1725  (1)  Hannah  Wetmore,  d  May  22,  1761,  dau  (?)  Samuel 
Wetmore  and  Feb  14,  1764,  (2)  Lydia  Wetmore.  His  property  was 
rated  in  1747  worth  £d\.  \os.  Children  (by  Hannah)— Hannah  (b  Nov 
30,  1725).  Ebenezer  (b  Aug  1,  1727),  Hope  (b  Feb  22,  1730),  Josiah  (b 
Mch  6,  1732),  Jedediah  (b  July  12.  1734.  d  Dec  10,  17N0.  in  Middle-field), 
Elijah  (b  Jan  16,  1737,  lived  in  Middlcfield),  Ruth.  Submit,  and  Heze- 
kiah  (b  Sep  2,  1742,  d  Oct  28,  1762). 


™  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

SON    OF    NATHANIEL    AND    SARAH    (JOHNSON)    HUBBARD. 

S5  NEHEMIAH— b  in  Middletown  July  22,  1721,  d  in  Holland 
Patent,  N.  Y.,  Mch  n,  181 1,  m  Oct  12,  1748,  Sarah  Sill— b  Jan  2,  1728,  d 
Aug  10,  1814 — youngest  dau  Joseph  and  Phebe  (Lord)  Sill  of  Lyme,  Ct. 
He  served  in  the  Old  French  Wai  for  many  years,  and  until  very  aged 
he  and  his  wife  rode  together  to  church  upon  one  horse,  she  occupying 
a  pillion  (see  Old  Homesteads).  Children— Sr  Isaac  (see  elsewhere), 
Sarah  (b  July  16,  1751,  d  1845,  m  Daniel  Crowell  of  South  Farms,  Long 

Hill,  Middletown,  son  of  John  and (Bidwell)  Crowell),  Nehemiah 

(see  Prominent  American  Hubbards),  Elisha  (b  Oct  1,  1753,  d  Jan  28, 
1S37,  m  Martha  Roberts— b  Apl  15,  1767,  d  July  6,  1827— and  had 
Elisha,  b  1792,  d  Mch  7,  1858,  m  Ruth  Bill— b  1787,  d  Sep  1,  1S51— and 
had  Nehemiah,  Sherman  B.,  Laura,  Parsons  and  Martha;  Martha*  b 
June  20,  1794,  d  Mch  30,  1888,  m  Uriah  Hayden  of  Essex,  Ct.,  and  had 
Horatio,  Eliza,  Edward,  Thomas  and  David;  Rebecca*  b  Dec  1,  1795,  d 
Sep  13,  1S85,  m  Chauncey  Wetmore  of  Middletown,  Ct.,  and  had 
Chauncey,  Lucy,  Harriet,  Cornelia,  Henry  and  Mary;  Anna*h  Apl  23, 
1797,  d  Sep  24,  1878,  m  Augustus  Phillips  of  Ithaca,  N.  Y.,  no  children; 
Sarah  Sill*  b  June  13,  1799,  d  Jan  19,  1892,  m  Josiah  Meigs  Hubbard, 
and  had  Robert,  Josiah  Meigs,  Sarah  Sill,  Mary  Anna,  Martha  Louise 
and  Lucy  Lyman  (see  Abridged  Descent  Lines);  Phebe*  b  Feb  10,  180 1, 
d  Mch  19,  18S3,  m  Seth  S.  Hall  of  Middletown;  infant,  d  y;  Daniel,  b 
Oct  21,  1803,  m  Louise  Newell  of  Union,  Ct.,  and  had  Joseph,  Nathaniel 
and  Henry;  David,  b  Sep  28,  1805,  d  unm  in  Iowa;  and  Mary*  b  Feb 
23,  1808,  d  unm  Feb  21,  1893,  in  Middletown),  Lucy  (b  Apl  22,  1755,  m 
Oct  10,  1773,  Rev.  Robert  Hubbard  and  rem  to  Shelbourne,  Mass.), 
David  (b  Feb  14,  1757,  Rev.  soldier  and  pensioned,  d  unm),  Jacob  (b 
Jan  8,  1759,  teamster  in  Rev.  War,  m  (1)  Sarah  Hobby,  (2)  Sarah  Hall, 
and  had  Samuel,  Nathaniel,  Nehemiah,  Joseph  and  Sarah),  Phebe  (b  Jan 
3,  1 761,  m  Elijah  Roberts,  and  had  Elijah  Hubbard,  b  Apl  4,  1795,  d 
Sep  16,  1871,  m  July  23,  1823,  Emily  Matilda  Pratt— b  Aug  17,  1797,  d 
Nov  8,  1870— dau  Capt.  John  Pratt  of  Middletown,  Ct.,  and  had  Elizabeth 
Cooper,  Frances  Emily,  John  Pratt,  Edward  Hubbard,  Mary  Pratt, 
Ellen  Cornelia  and  Richard  Hubbard;  Richard,  b  Sep  17,  1802,  d  Oct  2, 
1837,  m  his  cousin  Harriet  Hubbard  of  Ashtabula,  Ohio,  dau  Mathew 
and  Mary  (Willard)  Hubbard;  and  others,  names  unknown),  Anne  (b 
Oct  18,  1762,  m  Nov  20,  1783,  Ithamer  Atkins— b  Nov  16,  1757— son  of 
Thomas  and  Martha  (Miller)  Atkins,  lived  at  Long  Hill,  and  had  Jacob, 
Rhoda,  Richard,  Maria,  Thomas,  Sarah,  Henry,  William  H.  and  Albert), 
Mary  (b  Aug  18,  1764,  d  Mch  iS,  1766),  Mary  (b  Aug  20,  1765,  m  Giles 

*  See  Six  Hubbard  Sisters. 


GEORGE   HUBBARD,    OF  MIDDLETOWN,   CT 


o^j 


Seymour),  Nathaniel  (b  July  17,  1766,  drowned  off  the  coast  of  Ire- 
land), and  Mathew  (b  Nov  13,  1770,  d  y). 

S()\    i)F    JOHN    AM)    ELIZABETH    (STOWE)    HUBBARD. 

S6  JEREMIAH— b  in  Middletown  Oct  27,  1732,  d  there  Mch  7,  1 
m  abt  17S3  Elizabeth  Meigs,  dau  Deacon  Josiah  Meigs  of  Madison,  Ct 
When  Guilford  (now  Madison)  was  threatened  by  the  British  fleet  Cap- 
lain  JEREMIAH  HUBBARD  marched  his  company  to  its  defense 
Though  no  fight  occurred,  the  expedition  was  not  an  unsatisfactory  one 
to  Captain  HUBBARD,  who  made,  notwithstanding,  a  very  important 
conquest.  On  Sunday  morning  his  company  attended  church,  and  he 
was  invited  to  a  seat  in  Deacon  Meigs'  pew,  wherein  sat  Elizabeth 
Meigs,  the  pious  deacon's  charming  daughter.  She  became  Mrs.  Jere- 
miah Hubbard,  and  the  brave  captain  always  believed  that  his  capture 
at  Madison  was  the  principal  event  of  the  Revolutionary  War.  Chil- 
dren— S8  Jeremiah  (see  elsewhere),  Josiah  Meigs  (bin  Middletown  June 
10,  1785,  lived  and  died  there  Nov  16,  1862,  m  May  12,  1830,  Sarah  Sill 
Hubbard— b  in  Middletown  June  13,  1799,  lived  and  died  there  Jan  19. 
1S91 —  dau  Elisha  and  Martha  (Rob'ts)  Hubbard,  and  had  Robert,  Josiah 
Meigs,  Sara//  Si//,  Martha  Louise,  Mary  Anna  and  Lucy  Lyman  (see 
Abridged  Descent  Lines). 

\    ill'    NEHEMIAH    AND    SARAH    (SILL)    HUBBARD. 

S'  ISAAC— b  in  Middletown  Sep  24,  1749,  d  in  Ashtabula,  Ohio,  Mch 
ic,  1848,  aged  99  years  and  6  months,  m  in  Middletown  Jan  24,  1782. 
Ruth  Coleman  (b  in  Middletown  Apl  2,   1756,  d  in  Ashtabula   Mch  20, 
1843),  dau  Amos  and  Ruth  (Kirby)  Coleman  of  Middletown.     They 
lived  in  Middletown  until  about  1800,  when  with  three  other   Middle- 
town  families  they  removed  to  Oneida  County,  X.  V.,  about  nine  miles 
from  Utica.     After  living   in  Trenton,  X.  V.,  he  in   1834  went  to  Ash- 
da.  where  he  and  his  wife  died  at  very  advanced  years.     They  were 
iking.     Children  (all  b  in  Middletown  except  one)— S9  Ma  1  - 
v.  (see  elsewhere),  Isaac  (b  Apl  14.  1785,  in  Middletown,  d  unm  in 
enstown,  Can  ),  $10  William  (see  elsewhere),  Mary  (b  Apl  2:1,  1  - 
m  Amos  Fiskeof  Ashtabula  andhadeleven  children),  Ri  1 11  ( 
5,  1791,111  Jonathan  Townsend  of  Deerfield,  X.  V..  and  had  Mary  and 
ge),  Amos(1>  Mch  27,  1795,  d  1808),  Daniel  C.  (b  July  6,  1797,  d  in 
Buffalo,  X.  V.,  Aug  31,  [871,  m  Mary  I  >.  Townsend— b  1801,  d  i860— of 
Deerfield,  X.  V.,  and  had  Mary  G.  b  Feb  18,  1824,  d  Feb  .2.  1859,  m  E. 
Strong;  Cornelia  E.'h  Feb  18,  1827,  m   George   Pooley  and  had  five 
children,  four  deceased;  Henry  Townsend,  b  Sep  30.  1830,  m  Mrs.  F.  C. 
Dalton  and   had  seven   children;    Kate  Harriet,  b   June    12.    1833,    m 


304  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Thomas  N.  Ball  and  had  two  sons;  Isaac  George,  b  Nov  10,  1835,  m 
Alice  Mowbray  and  had  five  children;  Caroline  E.,  b  Oct  30,  1843,  mD. 
G.  Sterling  and  had  three  sons;  Dante/,  b  June  12,  1838,  d  Feb  24,  1864; 
Ellen,  b  Feb  15,  1841,  d  July  26,  1868;  John,  b  Feb  2,  1847,  d  July  22, 
1866),  and  Nehemiah  (b  blind  Sep  24,  1799,  d  1806). 

SON    OF    JEREMIAH    AND    ELIZABETH    (MEIGS)    HUBBARD. 

S8  JEREMIAH— b  in  Middletown  Mch  29,  1784,  d  there  in  1863,  m 
Dec  25,  1815,  Eunice  Prout — b  1795,  d  1856 — dau  Ebenezer  Prout  of 
Middletown.  JEREMIAH  HUBBARD  spent  his  young  days  upon 
his  father's  farm,  but  upon  reaching  manhood  indulged  his  mercantile 
propensities  by  selling  goods  through  Virginia,  North  Carolina  and 
Tennessee.  This  brought  him  a  competence,  and  he  returned  and  pur- 
chased the  farm  in  Long  Hill  District,  Middletown,  of  his  grandfather, 
Deacon  John  Hubbard,  which  had  descended  to  a  daughter,  and  upon 
her  marriage  had  temporarily  gone  out  of  the  Hubbard  name.  Here 
he  passed  his  remaining  days,  earning  a  reputation  for  industry,  integ- 
rity and  uprightness  of  character.  He  was  of  the  better  class  of  farm- 
ers, of  fine  physique  and  presence  (see  portrait),  and  a  member  of  the 
North  Congregational  Church*  in  Middletown  that  his  ancestor,  George 
Hubbard,  with  nine  others,  founded  in  1668.  He  also  filled  with  great 
credit  various  offices  of  trust  and  responsibility,  being  for  many  years 
a  Justice  of  the  Peace,  when  such  office  was  of  considerable  import- 
ance. He  had  ten  children,  of  whom  two  died  young,  and  the  others 
he  fairly  educated.  His  youngest  son  inherited  the  farm  and  estate, 
which  has  been  in  the  family  for  about  two  centuries,  and  which  is  yet 
in  the  family  name.  Children  (all  born  in  Middletown) — Herbert  R. 
(b  Nov  11,  1 81 7,  d  Mch  19,  1888,  in  Clinton,  Ct.,  farmer,  m  an  orphan, 
Charlotte  Crandall  of  New  Haven,  Ct.,  Sep  5,  1841,  and  had  George  R., 
b  Feb  3,  1843,  who  m  Nov  15,  1870,  Emily  C.  Preston'of  Wallingford, 
Ct.,  and  had  Clara;  Kate,  who  m  William  Doane  of  Clinton  and  had 
Grace;  Charles  Jll,  b  Mch  14,  1846,  d  Apl  2,  1846;  Samuel,  b  Mch  14, 
1846,  d  Apl  1, 1846;  Charlotte  E.,  b  Aug  30,  1847;  Mary  Kate  Elizabeth, 
b  Oct  24,  1849,  m  June  16,  1875,  William  A.  Doane;  and  Warren  Her- 
bert, b  Feb  11,  1866,  unm,  farmer,  lives  in  Clinton),  Elizabeth  R.  (b 
July  31,  1819,  d  in  Meriden,  Ct.,  June  21,  1891,  m  1840,  Robert  P.  Rand, 
of  Middletown  who  rem  to  Meriden  in  1856  and  had  Philip  C.  of  Ives, 
Upham  &  Rand,  Dry  Goods,  Meriden,  who  m  Maria  Foster,  dau  Hiram 
Foster  of  Meriden,  and  had  Richard,  John,  Mary  and  Sophia;  Ellen, 
who  m  Dr.  Silas  Benhani  of  Pittsburg,  Pa.,  and  d  there,  no  children; 
Robert,  who  m  Emma  Hamlin  of  Boston  and  had  Emma,  Helen  and  an- 

*  Prom  1668  until  1894  this  church  has  had  over  one  hundred  members  named  Hubbard,  exclusive  of 
those  of  Hubbard  blood  of  other  names,  being  the  leading  name  of  all  on  the  church  records. 


JEREMIAH    HUBBARD 
of  Middletown,  Ct. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.) 


3°5 


*o6  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AXD   GENEALOGY. 

other;  and  Mary,  who  d  y),  Josiah  (b  June  19,  1821,  d  July  30,  1891, 
joiner  and  builder,  m  Apl  10,  1844,  Sarah  Wilcox,  dau  Charles  Wilcox 
of  Wethersfield,  Ct.,  and  had  Fanny  A.,b  Apl  9,  1845,  m  Nov  14,  1867, 
Henry  Xearing  of  Cromwell,  Ct.,  who  rem  to  Wallingford  and  had 
Carrie  A.,  Charles  H.,  Harry  J.  and  John  J.;  Emma  M.,  b  Apl  29,  1847, 
d  Feb  17,  1888,  m  July  7,  1886,  William  E.  Xott  of  Middletown,  no  chil- 
dren; Charles  IV.,  b  Sep  30,  185 1,  bank  clerk  in  Middletown,  m  Sep  24, 
1874,  Abby  C.  Fowler  of  Durham,  Ct.,  no  children;  May  L.,  b  Sep  26, 
1858,  m  Dec  23,  1880,  Benjamin  D.  Putnam  of  Middletown,  no  children; 
and  Lizzie  R.,  b  Feb  14,  1865,  d  Oct  28,  1865),  Jeremiah  Warren  (b  Mch 
21,  1823,  d  in  Middletown  May  20,  1894,  a  leading  citizen  and  an  enter- 
prising lumber  merchant  and  builder,  m  Aug  17,  1847,  Sophia  Belden — 
b  June  16,  1823,  d  June  13,  1893 — dau  Alvin  Belden  of  New  Britain,  Ct., 
and  had  Helen  Louisa,  b  Jan  1,  1853,  m  Nov  4,  1874,  Frank  B.  Weeks  of 
Middletown,  of  Cowles  &  Weeks,  grain  merchants,  no  children;  Walter 
Bulkier,  b  May  31,  1855,  unm,  cashier  of  Middlesex  County  Bank  of 
Middletown,  has  engaged  considerably  in  Hubbard  genealogical  re- 
searches; and  Anna  Sophia,  b  May  9,  1S59,  m  Apl  15,  1890,  Rev.  Arthur 
Titcomb  of  Gilbertville,  Mass.,  no  children),  Mary  L.  (b  Aug  17,  1824, 
d  unm  in  Middletown  Sep  3,  1890),  George  W.  (b  June  8,  1826,  lives  in 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  retired  from  drug  and  chemical  business  in  X.  Y.  City 
with  a  competency,  m  Anna  Crampton,  dau  Levi  Crampton  of  New 
York,  no  children),  Walter  (see  Prominent  American  Hubbards), 
Harriet  Ellen  (b  Oct  7,  1830,  d  May  27,  1833),  Ebexezer  Prout  (b 
June  15,  1833,  d  in  Middlefield  Jan  10,  1894,  m  Mch  27,  1866,  Maritta 
Harriet  Heath  of  Tyringham,  Mass.,  and  had  Bessie  Maritta,  b  Jan  26, 
1867;  Harry  Heath,  b  June  31,  1869,  m  July  20,  1S93,  Myra  Xickerson 
of  Boston,  Mass.;  and  Grace  Louise,  b  Apl  7,  1870,  m  Oct  11,  1893, 
Charles  Talcott  Davis  of  Middletown). 

SONS    OF    ISAAC    AXD    RUTH    (COLEMAX)    HUBBARD. 

S9  MATTHEW— b  in  Middletown  Apl  29,  1783,  din  Ashtabula,  Ohio, 
July  9,  1869,  m  Nov  4,  1803,  at  Trenton,  Oneida  Co,  X.  Y.,  Mary  Willard 
(b  in  Wethersfield,  Ct.,  June  17,  1785,  d  in  Ashtabula  Sept  5,  1865),  dau 
of  Simon  and  Sarah  (Robins)  Willard.  At  15  he  came  with  his  parents 
to  Trenton,  and  May  4,  1804,  set  out  on  horseback  for  Ashtabula,  then 
a  small  settlement  on  the  shore  of  Lake  Erie.  He  arrived  in  12  days. 
Here  he  acted  as  land  agent  for  Xehemiah  Hubbard  of  "  Old  Connecti- 
cut," also  for  Samuel  Mather  and  Elijah  Hubbard,  all  very  extensive 
land  owners.     He  spent  his  winters  in  the  East  with  his  family. 

In  the  winter  of  1807-8,  he  took  his  wife  and  infant  son  (leaving  a 
daughter  with  grandparents)  as  far  as  Erie,  then  a  small  village  of  log 


GEORGE  HUB  HARD,  OF  MIDDLE  TOWN,  CT.  307 

houses,  where  he  left  them  and  continued  on  to  Ashtabula,  cleared 
eight  acres  of  land,  girdled  as  much  more,  and  built  a  log  house  on  the 
south  ridge.  In  April  following  he  brought  his  wife  and  son,  then  six 
months  old,  on  horseback,  mostly  over  an  Indian  trail,  to  their  future 
home;  and  thenceforth,  during  years  of  joy  and  sorrow,  they  became 
part  of  the  band  of  permanent  pioneers,  and  were  noted  among  their 
neighbors  for  their  good  looks,  which  descended  in  a  great  measure 
to  their  children. 

Among  the  first  in  opening  and  constructing  highways  and  turnpikes, 
he  was,  also,  one  of  the  chief  early  projectors  and  promoters  of  a  rail- 
road from  Ashtabula  to  the  Ohio  river,  now,  at  last,  by  another  genera- 
tion realized.     In  the  "War  of  181 2  he  went  as  volunteer,  under  Captain 
Payne,  to  defend  the  threatened  frontier.     After  the  war  there  came  an 
era  of  immigration,  on  foot,  horseback,  and  by  wagon,  and  no  oppor- 
tunity to  reasonably  assist  the  settlers  was  neglected  by  him.    The  Rev. 
John  Hall,  who  arrived  in   1S11,  in  a  paper  furnished  to  the  Ashtabula 
County  Historical  Society,  states  that  "  he  had  a  large  family  of  small 
children,  was  a  farmer,  land  agent,  and  surveyor,  and  one  of  the  prin- 
cipal  business   men,  public-spirited,  liberal,  helpful    to   the   poor,  and 
hospitable  and  kind  to  strangers  and  way-worn  travelers."     He  filled 
acceptably  the   offices   of   appraiser,  township  clerk,  postmaster,   and 
associate  judge  of  the  county  court.     One  of  his  important  life  labors 
was  acting  in  successful  conjunction  with  Hon.  Elisha  Whittlesey,  M.  C, 
cure  great  harbor  improvements  for  Ashtabula.     Children — Mary 
(b  in  Trenton,  X.  Y.,  Nov  23,  1804,  m  Nov  9,  1824,  Henry  J.  Rees  and 
had  Mary,  Thomas  Matthew  and  Harriet),  Amos  Coleman  (b  in  Tren- 
ton, Oct  24,  1S07,  d   Feb   26,  18S0,  m  Jan  2,  1834,  Eliza  Maria  Rees  and 
had  Mary  Elizabeth  b   Dec  29,  1S34,  m   Nov  25,  18S5,  Charles  Walker; 
Eliza   Maria    b   vSep    26,     1836,    d   Oct     13,     1867,   m    Oct    13,    1861, 
Richard  Henry  Attenborough,  killed  in  the   war  in  1863:  she  then  m 
Feb  14,  1867,  Rev.  Thomas   Lloyd   Bellam   of   Plymouth,  Ohio.     Amos 
i  max  Hubbard  then  m  Aug  24,  1842,  Mary  Sabin  and  had  Cornelia 
Sabin  b  July  29,  1S43,  d  July  30,  1845;  Ruth  Coleman  b  Dec  22,  1844,  m 
Dec   27,   1866,  Thomas   Griswold,  grandson   of  Governor  Griswold  of 
Conn.:    William  Amos  b  May  17,  1847,  d  Apl  3,  1863;  John  Matthew  b 
Nov  23,  1853,  killed  by  runaway  horse  June  '»,  [864;  Sabin  b  Apl  2,  1853, 
[ay  ii,  1854),  Sarah  (b  May  9,  1809,  d  Jan  ci,  1827),  Harriet  (b  Jan 
$ii,  d   Mch    1,  1846,  m  1S36  (1)  Richard    Roberts,  son   of   Elijah  and 
1  Hubbard)   Roberts  who  was  b  .Sep   17,  [802,  and  who  d  Oct  2, 
[837,  and  she  m  Feb  9,  1845,  (2)  William  Thompson),  Nehi  mi  \h  (b  Nov 
1 1,  1812,  m  Dec  19,  1858,  Amelia  Ann    Hopkins  and  had  Matthew  Hop- 
kins b  Sep   26,  1859,  drowned   May   24,    1870;  Mary  Amoliah  July  26, 


.08  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

1 86 1,  m  Apl  17,  1S84,  Richard  Beer  and  had  John  Hubbard  Beer;  Wal- 
ter Coleman  b  June  13,  1865,  m  Feb  12,  1S85,  Anna  K.  Vaughn  and  had 
3  children),  Eliza  (b  Jan  3,  1815,  d  May  11,  1841,  m  1S35  Ira  G.  Smith 
and  had  Frances  Cornelia,  b  Sep  16,  1836,  m  (1)  Thomas  G.  Dalton  and 
had  Thomas  Francis  Dalton  and  Wilson  Strader  Dalton  (2)  Henry  T. 
Hubbard  and  had  Henry  T.,  Amos  S.,  John  C,  Mathew  L.  and  Julia 
K.  Hubbard;  and  Matthew  Hubbard  b  April  28, 1841,  d  Aug  18,  1841), 
Isaac  (b  Nov  15,  1816,  d  Oct  26,  1835),  Cornelia  Frances  (see  Descent 
Line  William  Matthew  Strader),  Fidelia  (b  Feb  23,  1820,  d  Apl  12,  1827), 
Catharine  S.  (b  Aug  28,  1822,  m  Jan  2,  1843,  Linus  Logan  of  Newport, 
Ky.,  and  had  Caroline,  Margerct,  Catharine  Joint  Hubbard,  and  Cornelia; 
Mrs.  Catharine  S.  (Hubbard)  Logan  m  Oct  9,  1863,  Dr.  John  Coleman 
Hubbard),  Caroline  (b  Nov  1,  1824,  m  Jan  8,  1846,  LeRoy  Dodge  of 
Davenport,  Iowa,  and  had  Ellen,  b  Nov  22,  1846,  m  Dec  20, 1866,  Edward 
E.  Cook)  and  Sarah  Robins  (b  Nov  n,  1827). 

S10  WILLIAM— b  in  Middletown  May  6,  1787,  d  in  Ashtabula  Feb  24, 
1863,  m   Aug  10,  1S10,  Catherine    Hulbert   (or    Hurlbut),  b    May   29, 
1 7 86,  dau  of  Thomas   and  Catherine  Hulbert   of   Woodbury,  Ct.      He 
removed  about  1800  with  his  parents  to  Holland  Patent,  N.  Y.,  and  in 
1834  to  Ashtabula.     In  the  War  18 12  he  was  a  captain  in  Colonel  Cleve- 
land's regiment,  and  was  at  the  defense  of  Sackett's  Harbor,  N.  Y.,  then 
threatened  by  the  English  Navy  on  Lake  Ontario.     In  181 7  he  was  com- 
missioned Colonel  of  the  7  2d  New  York  Militia.     In  Ashtabula  he  was 
known  as  a  farmer,  and  for  20  years  justice  of  the  peace.     His  large 
brick  residence,  built  prior  to  1840,  was  a  terminus  of  the  "  underground 
railroad  system"  during  the  late  civil  war,  where  runaway  slaves  were 
concealed  and  then  at  favorable  opportunities  forwarded  to  Canada. 
Children— Catherine  Maria  (b  June  5,  181 1,  d  Nov  29,  1859,  m  Oct  29, 
1835,  O.  H.  Fitch),  William  Fairchild  (b  Feb  5,  1S12,  d  Nov  6,  1SS0,  m 
1847  Eliza  Taylor  of  Edinburgh,  Scotland,  and  had  Alicia  Cameron  and 
Kate  Eliza  of  Washington,  D.  C,  who  m  Edward  Buckley  Hubbard  of 
Ohio,  an  army  officer,  and  had  William  Francis),  Isaac  (b  Nov  22,  1814, 
d  July  22,  1816),  George  Clark  (b  Nov  22,  181 8,  d  May  14,  1876,  m  Apl 
23,  1850,  Elizabeth  S.  Hubbard,  dau  Buckley  and  Ruth  (Southard)  Hub- 
bard, and   had   Elizabeth  Clark,  John,   Ellen,    George  Clark,    William 
Buckley  and   Catharine),  John  Coleman  (b  in  Trenton,  N.  Y.,  July  22, 
1820,  d  June  5,  1883,  very  suddenly,  m  Oct  9,    1863,  Mrs.  Catherine  S. 
(Hubbard)  Logan;  he  was  a  very  popular  and  learned  physician,  a  writer 
of  medical  treatises,  and  a  close  student  of  political  science.     In  1878  he 
was  defeated  for  Congress  by  James  Abram  Garfield,  which  caused  him 
no  pangs,  his  heart  and  mind  being  wrapped  up  in  his  profession.)    Amos 
Fiske  (b  July  8,  1823,  d  Jan  22,  1893),  and  Edward  Welles  (b  Oct  16, 
1827,  d  Apl  4,  1837)- 


HENRY    GRISWOLD    HUBBARD, 
Manufacturer,  Middletown,  Ct. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.  i 


3°9 


WALTER    HUBBARD, 
Manufacturer,  Meriden,  Ct. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.) 


310 


Fame  is  the  inheritance,  not  of  the  dead,  hut.  of  the  living-  It  is  we  who  look  hack  with  lofty  pride 
to  the  great  names  of  antiquity,  who  drink  of  that  flood  of  glory  as  of  a  river,  and  refresh  our  wings  in 
it  for  future  flight—  William  Haslitt. 


EDMUND  WILCOX  HUBARD— born   1806,  Univ.  Va.,  1S26;  exten- 
sive farmer,  who  lived  in  Curdsville,  also  Thurston,  Buckingham 
Co.,  Va.;  Congressman  from  1841  to  1846. 

DAVID  HUBBARD— born  in  Virginia  in  1806  :  rem  to  Kinlock,  Ala.; 
lawyer,  state  senator,  Congressman  in  1850,  also  presidential  elector, 
member  rst  Confederate  Congress  and  appointed  by  it  Commissioner 
of  Indian  Affairs. 

RICHARD  WILLIAM  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hubbard 
of  Middletown,  Ct.),  son  of  Thomas  and  Frances  (Tabor)  Hubbard,  born 
in  Middletown,  Ct.,  Oct  6,  181 6.  He  became  a  famous  landscape  painter 
in  X.  Y.  City;  elected  President  Artists'  Funds  Society,  also  President 
Brooklyn  Art  Association.    Many  fine  paintings  are  placed  to  his  credit. 

JOSEPH  STILLMAN  HUBBARD  (descended  from  William  Hub- 
bard of  Ipswich,  Mass.),  son  of  Ezra  Stiles  and  Elizabeth  (Church) 
Hubbard,  was  born  Sep  7,  1823,  in  New  Haven,  Ct.,  and  died  there  Aug 
6,  1863.  He  graduated  from  Yale  in  1S43,  and  soon  took  high  rank  as  a 
scientist,  mathematician  and  astronomer.  He  successfully  computed 
all  the  observations  of  latitude  and  longitude  of  the  John  C.  Fremont 
expedition  across  the  Rocky  Mountains.  Hon.  George  C.  Bancroft, 
when  Secretary  of  the  Navy,  appointed  him  Professor  of  Mathematics 
in  the  Navy,  and  he  was  assigned  to  the  Naval  Observatory  at  Wash- 
ington, D.  C,  where  he  made  many  important  astronomical  discoveries, 
which  were  printed  in  various  volumes.  He  was  an  original  member  of 
the  National  Academy  of  Science,  and  married  in  May,  1848,  Sarah  E. 
L.  Handy  of  Washington,  D.  C.  Children — Ezra  Stiles  (b  Dec,  185(5, 
d  Mch,  1857),  and  Emily  Taylor  (b  Mch  21,  1830, m  June  21,  1854,  Rev. 
James  A.  Gallup  of  Essex,  Ct). 
311 


3I2  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

DEMAS  HUBBARD,  JR.  (descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guil- 
ford, Ct),  son  of  Demas  and  Fanny  (Catlin)  Hubbard,  was  born  Jan  17, 
1806,  in  Winfield,  Herkimer  Co.,  N.  Y.,  and  died  Sep  2,  1873,  in  Smyrna, 
N.  Y.  He  was  a  prosperous  farmer  and  good  lawyer;  was  assemblyman 
in  the  State  Legislature  of  1838-40  and  Representative  in  the  39th  Con- 
gress (session  of  1864).  He  married  (1)  Laura  Catlin  and  (2)  Caroline 
Franklin. 

WILLIAM  HUBARD  (tradition  says  he  was  a  grandson  of  James, 
who  came  from  England  in  (?)  1 700  and  settled  in  Gloucester  Co.,  Va.),  was 
born  in  Williamsburg,  Va.,  graduated  at  William  and  Mary  College  in 
1760;  was  clergyman  of  Warwick  Parish,  Va.,  during  years  177  3~6,  and 
then  became  rector  of  St.  Luke's  Parish,  Isle  of  Wight  Co.,  Va.;  also  a 
magistrate,  and  widely  known  as  a  scholar  and  one  of  Virginia's  fore- 
most men. 

ASAHEL  WHEELER  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hub- 
bard of  Middleton,  Ct.),  son  of  Simeon  and  Esther  (Wheeler)  Hubbard, 
was  born  in  Haddam,  Ct.,  Jan  18,  181 9;  removed  to  Indiana  in  1838,  where 
he  graduated  at  law  in  1841;  was  a  member  of  the  Indiana  Legislature 
in  1847;  removed  to  Sioux  City,  Iowa,  in  1857;  became  Judge  of  the 
Fourth  Judicial  District  Court;  elected  in  1862  Representative  of  the 
38th  Congress,  and  re-elected  to  the  39th  and  40th  Congresses. 

LEVI  HUBBARD,  second  son  of  Capt  Jonas  (who  was  killed  in 
the  assault  on  Quebec  while  valiantly  leading  his  men)  and  Mary 
(Stevens)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Worcester,  Mass.,  Dec  19,  1762;  he  was  a 
Presidential  Elector  in  1820  and  1828  after  Maine  became  a  State; 
County  Treasurer  and  State  Counselor  in  1829;  member  of  the  Massa- 
chusetts Legislature  in  1804-5;  State  Senator  in  1806,  1807,  1811  and 
1816;  Congressman  in  18 13,  18 15,  the  first  member  from  Oxford  Count)', 
Me.,  where  he  removed  and  settled  in  the  town  of  Paris,  being  one  of  its 
first  settlers. 

RICHARD  BENNET  HUBBARD,  son  of  George  Hubbard  of  Vir- 
ginia, was  born  in  Walton  Co.,  Ga.,  Nov  1,  1832;  graduated  from  Mercer 
(Ga.)  Univ.  in  1850;  studied  law  at  the  Univ.  of  Va.;  admitted  to  the 
bar  in  1853;  LL.  B.  by  Harvard  same  year;  removed  to  Texas,  where 
he  was  U.  S.  District  Atty  in  1856-58;  delegate  to  the  National  Demo- 
cratic Conventions  of  1856  and  i860;  member  of  the  State  Legislature 
in  1858;  Colonel  in  the  Confederate  Army;  Lieut-Gov.  of  Texas  in  1874 
and  President  of  State  Senate;  Governor  of  Texas  in  1876  and  Presi- 
dential Elector  in  1880.  President  Cleveland  appointed  him  Envoy 
Extraordinary  and  Minister  Plenipotentiary  to  Japan  in  1885,  which 
position  he  finally  resigned,  and,  returning  to  the  United  States,  inter- 
ested himself  principally  in  railroad  enterprises. 


HON.    THOMAS    HILL    HUBBARD,    M.    C, 
of  Utica,  N.  Y. 


(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford,  Ct.) 


3*3 


3  1 4  HUBBA  RD  HIS  TOR  Y  AND   GENEALOG  Y. 

FORDYCE  MITCHELL  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George 
Hubbard  of  Guilford,  Ct.),  eldest  son  of  Roswell  and  Sarah  (Mitchell) 
Hubbard,  was  born  Jan  13,  1809,  in  Cummington,  Mass.  His  family 
subsequently  removed  to  Northampton,  Mass.;  graduated  from  Williams 
College  in  1828  and  was  tutor  there  in  1831-2.  He  married  in  1829 
Martha  Henshaw,  daughter  of  Ex-United  States  Senator  (from  Mass.) 
Isaac  Chapman  Bates;  was  made  D.  D.  in  i860  by  Trinity  College, 
Hartford,  and  S.  T.  D.  by  Columbia  College,  N.  Y.,  same  year;  removed 
to  Newbern,  N.  C,  and  became  an  Episcopal  clergyman,  and  also  Pro- 
fessor of  Latin  in  Univ.  of  N.  C,  at  Chapel  Hill  until  1868;  he  then 
removed  to  Manlius,  N.  Y.,  but  again  returned  to  Raleigh,  N.  C, 
where  he  died  Sep  1,  1888.  He  was  found  dead  in  the  attitude  of 
prayer. 

THOMAS  HILL  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hubbard  of 
Guilford,  Ct.),  fourth  son  of  Bela  and  Grace  Dunbar  (Hill)  Hubbard, 
was  born  Dec  8,  1781,  at  New  Haven,  Ct.,  and  graduated  from  Yale  Col- 
lege in  1799.  He  studied  law  with  Judge  John  Woodworth  of  Troy,  N. 
Y.,  and  soon  after  was  admitted  to  the  bar  and  settled  in  the  practice  of 
his  profession  in  1804  at  Hamilton,  N.  Y.  His  superior  talents,  culti- 
vated by  a  fine  education  and  thorough  training  as  a  lawyer,  soon  won 
for  him  an  extensive  practice  and  a  leading  position  in  his  profession. 
In  1806  he  was  appointed  first  surrogate  of  Madison  County,  which  office 
he  held  for  ten  years.  In  181 7  he  was  appointed  District  Attorney,  but 
being  elected  Member  of  Congress  resigned  to  fill  two  terms  at  Wash- 
ington— 1817-19  and  1821-23  — as  Representative  of  Madison  and 
Herkimer  counties.  In  1824,  having  been  appointed  Clerk  of  the 
Supreme  Court  of  the  State  of  New  York,  he  removed  to  Utica, 
where  he  filled  that  office  for  many  years,  and  where  he  resided 
until  his  death,  May  21,  1857.  While  a  resident  of  Hamilton  he 
was  chosen  an  elector  for  James  Madison,  and  twice  afterward  as 
an  elector  for  James  K.  Polk  and  Franklin  Pierce,  as  Presidents, 
respectively. 

In  181 2  he  married  Phebe  (d  187 1),  second  daughter  of  Micah  and 
Content  (Guernsey)  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.  Children — Henry 
Guernsey  (b  181 3,  d  unm  in  1846),  Bela  (see  elsewhere  under  Promi- 
nent American  Hubbards),  Frances  Elizabeth  (b  1815,  d  1892,  m  Hon. 
John  Stryker  of  Rome,  N.  Y.),  Frederick  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line), 
Grace  Hill  (b  1819,  d  1881,  m  Edwin  C.  Litchfield,  LL.  D.),  Mary  Ann 
Pitkin  (b  1821,  d  1822),  Thomas  Dering  (b  1823,  d  1855,  unm),  Mary 
Smith  (b  1825,  d  1856,  m  E.  Darwin  Litchfield),  Edward  Burr  (b  1826, 
d  1845,  unm),  Caroline  (b  1828,  d  Dec  23,  1867),  and  Robert  James  (see 
Abridged  Descent  Line). 


PROMINENT  AMERICAN  HUBBARDS.  3I5 

THOMAS  HAMLIN  HUBBARD  (descended  from  Richard  Hubbard 
of  Salisbury,  Mass.)  youngest    son  of  John  and  Sarah  Hodge  (Barrett) 

Hubbard,  was  born  in  Hallowed,  Me.,  Dec  20,  1838.  He  attended  Hal- 
lowed Academy,  graduated  from  Bowdoin  College  in  1857,  attended 
the  Albany  (N.  Y.)  Law  School;  was  admitted  to  the  bar  in  N  V.  City 
in  1861,  but  soon  forsook  the  forensic  field  for  the  battlefield;  was  Ad- 
jutant of  the  25th  Maine  Vols,  Lt.  Col.  30th  Maine  Vols,  (afterward  its 
Colonel);  was  brevetted  Brigadier-General  July  13,  1865;  served  in  the 
Red  River  campaign,  participating  in  numerous  battles;  received  a 
special  commendation  in  Admiral  Porter's  report  for  his  conduct  in  aid- 
ing the  construction  of  the  Red  River  dam  at  Alexandria  for  the  passage 
of  the  Federal  fleet.  He  further  distinguished  himself  in  the  Shenand<  >ah 
Valley  campaign  under  Gen.  Phil  Sheridan,  and  did  further  efficient  ser- 
vice at  Savannah,  Ga.  At  the  pipings  of  peace  he  was  mustered  <  >ut  and 
resumed  the  practice  of  law  in  X.  Y.  City  under  the  firm  name  of  But- 
ler, Stillman  &  Hubbard.  He  is  one  of  the  trustees  of  Bowdoin  Col- 
lege, his  alma  mater.  He  married  Jan  28,  1868,  Sibyl  Amelia  Fahne- 
stock  (b  in  Harrisburg,  Jan  1,  1842),  of  Harrisburg,  Pa.  Children— 
John  (bin  Brooklyn,  X.Y.,  Feb  13, 1870),  infant  son  (b  Nov  21,  187 1,  d  Dec. 
9,  187 1),  Thomas  (b  N.  Y.  July  30,  1874,  d  there  Meh  7,  1879),  Sibyl 
Emma  (b  X.  Y.  Feb  11,  1877),  and  Anna  Weir  (b  X.  Y.  Sep  29,  1878). 

J<  > NATHAN  HATCH  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hub- 
bard of  Guilford,  Ct.),  second  son  of  George  and  Thankful  (Hatch) 
Hubbard,  was  born  May  10,  1768,  in  Tolland,  Ct.,  and  removed  at  ten 
years  of  age  to  Claremont,  X.  H.  He  studied  law  and  was  admitted  to 
the  bar  in  1790  at  Charlestown,  X.  H.,  and  married  there  in  1793  Eliza- 
beth Hastings.  In  1 795  he  located  in  Windsor,  Vt.  There  he  was  highly 
esteemed  as  a  useful  citizen  and  distinguished  jurist.  He  was  a  Mem- 
ber of  Congress  1808-12,  and  Judge  of  the  Supreme  Court  of  Vermont 
in  1 81 3  and  until  his  death,  which  occurred  at  Windsor  September  20, 
1849,  in  the  house  which  he  built  and  occupied  for  over  half  a  century. 
William  Henry  Hubbard,  Duluth,  Minn.,  writes  of  him:  "Among  the 
brightest  recollections  of  my  early  boyhood  is  the  serene  face  of  this 
grand  old  man.  While  the  elders  loved  and  respected  him,  to  boys  he 
was  a  magnet.  Retired  from  the  active  work  of  life  he  read  a  little, 
watched  the  thermometer,  and  brightened  the  lives  of  all  around  him. 
To  his  grandson  and  myself  his  society  was  the  acme  of  entertainment, 
and  his  precepts  the  perfection  of  wisdom.  At  the  distance  of  half  a 
century  I  recall  his  silvered  head  and  pleasant  laugh  as  he  joined  in 
our  games,  and  am  reminded— profitably,  I  hope— of  the  halo  that  will 
eternally  crown  the  head  of  that  good  gray  grandfather  "  His  daughter 
Maria  (b  1806)  m  Hon.  Thomas  Fullerton  and  had    William  Hubbard. 


^n^£?c«BRiDGt.v-r.  ^d 


Jonathan  Hatch  Hubbard  and  Rev.  Thomas  Swan  Hubbard  descended  from  George  Hubbard  of 
Guilford,  Ct.;  Dr.  Joel  Douslas  Hubbard  from  Joel  Hubbard  of  Kentucky;  and  Dr.  Jacobus 
Hubbard  from  James  Hubbard  of  Gravesend,  L.  I. 
316 


PROMINENT  AMERICAN  HUBBARDS. 


17 


EDMUND  CLARENCE  HUBBARD  (descended  from  Edmund 
Hobart  of  Hingham,  Mass.),  youngest  son  of  Theodore  and  Anna 
(Ballon)  Hubbard,  was  born  near  Chicago,  111.,  Feb  24,  1843.  After 
graduating  from  the  Chicago  High  School  he  became  a  lawyer.  April 
21,  1 86 1,  he  enlisted  in  the  13th  Illinois  Volunteers  and  participated  in 
seven  famous  battles,  including  the  siege  of  Vicksburg,  Lookout  Moun- 
tain and  Missionary  Ridge.  He  was  mustered  out  as  sergeant-major 
June  18,  1864,  and  returned  to  the  practice  of  law  both  in  Chicago  and 
Hartford,  Ky.,  where  he  married  Lucy  Shanks,  daughter  of  Col.  Quintus 
Cincinnatus  Shanks,  a  Union  Cavalry  officer.  He  was  a  fearless  sol- 
dier, brilliant  orator,  prominent  Mason,  honorable  politician  and  lawyer 
and  delegate  to  the  National  Republican  Conventions  of  1876  and  1880. 
He  opposed  the  "  third-term"  proposition  in  a  masterly  speech  at  the 
St.  Louis  Convention  in  1880,  and  was  a  presidential  elector-at-large  for 
Kentucky  and  Adjutant-General  of  the  G.  A.  R.  of  that  State.  Mr. 
HUBBARD  helped  form  the  first  Army  and  Navy  Club  in  the  North- 
west, of  which  Charles  A.  Dana  was  the  first  President.  He  died  in 
Chicago,  111.,  June  27,  1S87.  Children— Walter  Quintus,  Laura 
Pauline  and  Mabelle. 

JOEL  DOUGLAS  HUBBARD,  M.  D.,  son  of  William  Thompson 
and  Catherine  A.  (Patterson)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Saline  County, 
Mo.,  Nov  6,  1S60.  He  attended  school  while  a  boy  at  Fayette,  Mo.,  and 
graduated  from  the  Missouri  Medical  College  at  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  in  1S83, 
settling  in  the  practice  of  his  profession  first  at  Syracuse,  Mo.,  thence  to 
Versailles,  Mo.,  in  1887,  where  he  has  enjoyed  the  confidence  of  the  com- 
munity as  a  professional  as  well  as  an  honorable  gentleman.  His  father 
was  born  in  Randolph  County,  Mo.,  Feb  15,  1827,  and  followed  also  the 
occupation  of  a  physician.  His  mother  was  Catherine  A.  Patterson, 
daughter  of  William  H.  and  Sarah  Smith  (Hale)  Patterson  of  Wood- 
ford County,  Ky.  She  was  born  Dec  25,  1828,  and  married  Dr.  Hub- 
bard Oct  20,  1859,  they  having  4  children,  viz.:  JOEL  D.  (see  fore- 
going), William  P.  (b  Oct  1,  1863,  married),  Sally  (b  Oct  1,  1863,  d  at 
3  mos),  and  George  Hale  (b  Nov  3,  1865,  married).  Dr.  HUBBARD'S 
grandfather,  Joel  Hubbard,  came  to  Missouri  from  Kentucky  in  [825). 
Dr.  HUBBARD  has  added  some  reputation  to  his  otherwise  well-known 
ability  by  defeating  for  election  to  the  Fifty-Fourth  Congress  the  well- 
known  advocate  of  the  silver  dollar,  Mr.  Richard  P.  Bland,  whom  he  <  »ver- 
threw  by  a  plurality  of  70  out  of  36,562  votes  cast.  He  married  Feb  1 7, 
1887,  Cora  L.  Kennedy  of  Syracuse,  Mo.,  daughter  of  George  and  Mary 
A.  (Shankley)  Kennedy.  Children  (all  born  at  Versailles)— Beulah  D. 
(b  Mch  25,  1888),  James  Anthony  (b  July  18, 1889),  Mary  Aurelia  (b  Oct 
11,  1891),  and  Cora  Lee  (b  Nov  29,  1893). 


3i8  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

SILAS  GRAVES  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hubbard  of 
Guilford,  Ct.),  eldest  son  of  John  and  Clarissa  (Clapp)  Hubbard,  was 
born  in  Hatfield,  Mass.,  in  1827,  and  died  there  in  1890.  He  was 
one  of  the  most  progressive  and  enterprising  farmers  in  the  whole 
valley  of  the  Connecticut,  and  held  various  honorable,  civil,  and  official 
stations  in  life.  He  was  at  various  times  town  treasurer,  a  civil 
engineer,  bank  director,  trustee,  secretary  and  treasurer  of  Smith 
Academy,  member  of  the  Congregational  Church  and  also  of  the  Mass. 
Legislature.  In  politics  he  was  originally  a  Whig,  and  then  a  Repub- 
lican. As  President  of  the  New  England  Tobacco  Grower's  Association 
he  showed  great  knowledge  and  ability,  on  which  account  he  was  ten- 
dered an  important  office  under  the  inspector  of  customs  in  New  York. 
He  married  Rhoda  Hastings,  dau  of  Justin  Hastings,  and  died  childless. 

JOHN  HUBBARD,  JR.  (descended  from  Richard  Hubbard  of  Salis- 
bury, Mass.),  son  of  Dr.  John  and  Olive  (Wilson)  Hubbard,  was  born  in 
Readfield,  Kennebec  Co.,  Me.,  Mch  22,  1794,  and  died  in  Hallowell,  Me., 
Feb  6,  1869.  He  attended  Monmouth  Academy,  Me.,  and  graduated 
from  Dartmouth  College  in  181 6,  and  then  studied  medicine  with  his 
father  and  graduated  in  that  science  from  the  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania in  1822.  He  afterward  taught  school  in  Dinwiddie  Co.,  Va.,  and 
also  practiced  medicine  there,  but  returned  and  practiced  at  Hallowell, 
Me.,  where  he  ranked  high  in  his  profession.  He  was  elected  State 
Senator  of  Maine  in  1842-3,  and  became  a  staunch  supporter  of  the 
Maine  liquor  law.  The  people  elected  him  Democratic  Governor  of 
Maine  in  1850.  He  was  Commissioner  to  Great  Britain  for  the  United 
States  in  1859-61,  where  he  negotiated  a  reciprocity  treaty  for  his 
country.  He  married  at  Dresden,  Me.,  July  12,  1825,  Sarah  Hodge 
Barrett  (b  in  New  Milford,  Lincoln  Co.,  Me.,  Mch  4,  1796),  eldest 
daughter  Oliver  and  Elizabeth  (Carlton)  Barrett  of  Dresden  and  New 
Milford,  Me.  Children — Hester  Ann  (b  in  Dinwiddie  Co.,  Va.,  Feb  13, 
1827,  d  in  Hallowell  July  21,  1836),  infant  son  (b  Jan  21,  1829,  d  y), 
Virginia  Hamlin  (b  in  Hallowell  Aug  5,  1881,  m  at  Hallowell  Aug  24, 
1864,  Thomas  W.  Thompson  Curtis  of  Hartford,  Ct.,  son  of  Rev.  Jonathan 
and  Martha  (Baker)  Curtis,  and  hady<?/^  Hubbard  and  Thomas  Hamlin), 
Emma  Gardiner  (b  in  Hallowell  Apl  26,  1834,  d  in  N.  Y.  City  unm  Feb 
12,  1877),  John  Barrett  (b  in  Hallowell  Feb  4,  1837,  grad  Bowdoin 
College,  Brunswick,  Me.,  taught  school  at  Lynn,  Mass.,  served  as  1st 
Lieut  1st  Me  Batty  under  Gen  B.  F.  Butler,  promoted  Captain  and 
Assistant  Adjutant-General  upon  staff  of  Gen  Godfrey  Weitzel  Oct  27, 
1862,  killed  at  Port  Hudson,  La.,  May  27,  1863,  unm),  and  General 
Thomas  Hamlin,  lawyer  in  New  York  City  (see  elsewhere  under  Promi- 
nent American  Hubbards). 


PRO  MIX  EN  T  A  M ERIC  A  N  HUBBA  RDS.  3  1 9 

HENRY  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guil- 
ford, Ct.),  eldest  son  of  John  and  Prudence  (Stevens)  Hubbard,  was 
born  May  3,  1784,  in  Charlestown,  N.  H.,  and  died  June  5,  1857,  at 
Charlestown,  N.  H.,  in  the  house  where  he  was  born.  He  graduated 
at  Dartmouth  in  1803,  and  became  successively  a  lawyer,  Speaker  of  the 
State  Legislature,  State  Solicitor,  Judge  of  Probate,  Member  of  Congress 
(Dem.)  and  Speaker  pro  tempore  in  1834  of  the  House  of  Representatives, 
United  States  Senator  1835-41,  Governor  of  New  Hampshire  1842-43  and 
United  States  Sub-Treasurer  at  Boston  in  1850.  He  married  Novem- 
ber 30,  1813,  Sally  Walker  Dean,  daughter  of  Aaron  and  Phyla  Dean. 
She  was  born  July  6,  1795,  and  died  in  Boston  in  April,  1S76.  He  was 
"  a  good  Channing  Unitarian."  Children — Henry  (b  June  21,  1817,  at 
Charlestown,  N.  H.,  rem  to  Va.,  m  Louisa  West  (see  Abridged  Descent 
Line  Henry  Scott  Hubbard),  Sarah  Dean  (b  Oct  8,  1814,  m  Aug  25, 
1836,  Chief  Justice  John  James  Gilchrist),  Nathaniel  Dean  (b  Jan  14, 
182 1,  lived  in  Boston,  Mass.,  m  Anna  Frothingham  and  had  Gorham,  b 
1S64,  and  Catherine,  b  1S65),  Richard  (b  Nov  13,  1823,  m  Sarah  Clapp 
and  had  Waldo,  b  1853,  rem  to  California;  Richardh  1855,  rem  to  Cali- 
fornia; Eliot,  b  1856,  resides  in  Boston;  Joshua,  b  i860,  and  Helen,  b 
1863),  and  Aaron  Dean  (b  May  13,  1826,  went  to  Boston). 

THOMAS  HUBBARD  (descended  from  John  Hubbard  of  Pomfret, 
Ct.),  eldest  son  of  Benjamin  and  Chloe  Eldridge  (widow  of  James 
Eldridge)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Smithfield,  R.  Lin  1774,  and  died  June 
16,  1838,  in  New  Haven,  to  which  place  he  came  from  Pomfret,  Ct., 
after  leaving  Smithfield.  When  he  was  16  years  old  his  father  died, 
leaving  him  to  provide  for  his  mother  and  several  younger  children, 
which  responsibility  he  successfully  assumed.  He  was  schooled  in  the 
science  of  medicine  and  surgery  by  Dr.  [Albigence  ?]  Waldo,  once  an 
army  surgeon,  and  at  21  was  practicing  as  "  Dr."  THOMAS  HUB- 
BARD. Nearly  his  whole  life  was  devoted  to  raising  his  profession  to 
the  highest  scientific  elevation.  He  was  a  member  of  the  Connecticut 
Legislature  for  several  terms,  both  as  Representative  and  Senator, 
President  of  the  State  Medical  Society,  and  actively  engaged  in  further- 
ing the  prosperity  of  such  institutions  as  the  Asylum  for  Deaf  and 
Dumb,  the  Retreat  for  the  Insane,  and  the  State  Hospital.  He  was 
called  to  the  Chair  of  Surgery  at  Yale  in  1829,  which  position  he  filled 
until  his  death.  He  married  Apl  14,  i799>  Betsey  Gray  (d  Feb  7.  1N.5). 
daughter  of  Thomas  Gray,  and  had  Frances  Harriet  (m  Simeon  North, 
Pres.  Hamilton  Coll.,  N.  Y.),  Thomas  Gray  (d  insane  in  Hartford  Hos- 
pital), Benjamin  Russell  (d  while  in  the  Navy  m  the  Mediterranean 
Sea),  Edward  (d  y),  and  William.  Dr.  HUBBARD  then  married  his 
wife's  sister,  Lucy  (Gray)   Lee  (d    Dec  10,   1890).  widow  of   Dr.  Lee  of 


320  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

Windham,  Ct,  and  had  Mary  Elizabeth  (b  May  23,  18 16,  m  Aug  29, 
1836,  William  Huntington  Russell  and  had  Lucy  Gray,  Frances  Harriet, 
Henrietta  Lee,  Mary,  Talc ott,  Huntington,  William  Huntington,  Thomas 
Hubbard,  Philip  Gray,  Edward  Hubbard  and  Robert  Gray). 

SAMUEL  BIRDSEY  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hub- 
bard of  Middletown,  Ct.),  eldest  son  of  Charles  and  Delia  S.  (Birdsey) 
Hubbard,  was  born  in  Wadesboro,  N.  C,  June  13,  1833,  where  his  father, 
with  his  four  brothers,  Asa,  Elisha  Sears,  Jacob  and  George  Stocking, 
had  come  to  make  their  respective  fortunes.  They  were  all  successful, 
and  returned  to  Middletown  one  by  one  with  their  families  to  enjoy  the 
modest  results  of  their  industry  until  their  days  were  closed.  The 
subject  of  this  sketch,  however,  remained  South  and  entered  into  an 
active  mercantile  career,  coming  North  in  1861  and  remaining  in  Mid- 
dletown until  the  close  of  the  war,  when  he  returned  South  and  engaged 
in  the  hardware  business.  Mr.  HUBBARD  appears  to  be  president  of 
nearly  every  important  corporation  in  Jacksonville,  viz.:  The  Citizens' 
Gas  Light  Co.,  The  Jacksonville  Electric  Light  Co.,  The  Southern  Sav- 
ings &  Trust  Co.,  and  The  Main  Street  Electric  Railroad.  He  is  also 
president  of  the  "  S.  B.  Hubbard  Co.,"  wholesale  and  retail  dealers  in 
hardware,  steam  and  gas  fittings,  etc.,  which  supplies  many  Southern 
business  houses  His  son,  Samuel  Birdsey  Hubbard,  Jr.,  is  secretary  of 
the  firm.  Mr.  HUBBARD  did  not  reach  the  apex  of  business  success 
by  short  cuts  towards  the  gaol  nor  by  the  assistance  of  rich  relatives. 
He  traveled  the  arduous  paths  that  most  self-made  men  do,  and  his 
many  true  Middletown  friends  rejoice  that  a  poor  boy  against  trying 
odds  in  a  chilly  world  stands  out  so  prominently  now  a  victor  over 
adverse  circumstances,  circumstances  not  mentioned  by  himself,  but 
which  came  to  the  notice  of  the  writer  of  this  sketch,  nevertheless.  In 
February,  i860,  Mr.  HUBBARD  married  his  cousin,  Almira  T.  Hub 
bard  (b  June  25,  1839),  daughter  of  Asa  and  Sarah  Anne  (Tryon) 
Hubbard.  Children— Carrie  (b  Jan  4,  1861),  Miriam  (b  Oct  18,  1862,  d 
Oct  23,  1867),  Marie  Louise  (b  Jan  6,  1866,  d  Dec  30,  1869),  Myra  Tryon 
(b  June  15,  1869,  d  Jan  15,  1870),  Samuel  Birdsey  (b  Mch  8,  1871), 
Archer  Stanford  (b  May  23,  1874),  Albert  Tryon  (b  Dec  2,  1876,  d 
Jan  14,  1877),  and  Thomas  Rowland  (b  Nov  3,  1883,  d  June  22,  18S6). 

SAMUEL  DICKINSON  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George 
Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.),  son  of  Elijah  and  Abigail  (Dickinson) 
Hubbard,  was  born  in  Middletown,  Ct.,  Aug  10,  1799.  In  1819  he  grad- 
uated from  Yale  University  with  the  expectation  of  adopting  for  a  life's 
vocation  the  legal  profession.  With  this  intention  he  began  by  reading 
law  with  his  uncle,  Judge  John  Dickinson,  of  Troy,  N.  Y.  The  require- 
ments of  the  times,  however,  led  him  to  engage  in  manufacturing  in- 


SAMUEL    BIRDSEY    HUBBARD, 
Merchant,  Jacksonville,  Fla. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.) 


321 


322  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

dtistries,  and  he  became  connected  for  several  years  with  the  Pamecha 
Manufacturing  Company  and  also  with  the  Russell  Manufacturing 
Company  as  agent,  and,  finally,  treasurer.  His  sound  judgment  and 
skillful  financiering  brought  the  latter  company  through  several  critical 
periods  of  monetary  dangers.  This  line  of  business  experience  made 
him  an  ardent  protectionist,  and  in  politics  a  Whig;  thus  the  Whig 
party  selected  him  as  their  standard  bearer  from  1845  to  1849  to  repre- 
sent them  in  the  29th  and  30th  Congresses.  There  he  engaged  in  active 
and  scholarly  debate  and  attracted  the  attention  of  public  men.  When 
the  Hon.  Millard  Fillmore  became  President  he  showed  his  admiration 
for  his  qualities  by  selecting  him  as  his  Postmaster-General,  which  place 
he  filled  with  credit  to  himself,  to  President  Fillmore  and  to  the  nation 
from  Aug  31,  1852,  to  March  7,  1853. 

Mr.  HUBBARD  was  not  unmindful  of  the  demands  made  upon  him 
by  educational,  religious  and  benevolent  societies.  His  heart  was 
always  with  them,  and  he  earnestly  identified  himself  with  the  spirit  of 
their  aims  and  purposes.  In  1854  Wesleyan  University  conferred  upon 
him  the  degree  of  LL.  D.,  of  which  institution  he  was  trustee  from  1831 
until  his  death.  He  married  in  Feb,  1853,  Jane  Miles,  daughter  of  Isaac 
Miles  of  Milford,  Ct.  There  were  no  children,  His  niece,  Miss  Susan 
Carrington  Clarke,  descended  from  Hon.  Stephen  Hopkins  (a  signer  of 
the  Declaration  of  Independence)  through  Admiral  Esek  Hopkins 
and  John  Hopkins  Clarke  (Senator  from  Rhode  Island),  occupied  a 
daughter's  place  in  his  home  circle  until  his  death,  which  occurred  Oct 
5,  1855,  in  Middletown,  Ct. 

WALTER  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Mid- 
dletown Ct.),  eighth  child  of  Jeremiah  and  Eunice  (Prout)  Hubbard, 
was  born  in  Middletown,  Ct.,  April  23,  1828,  and  attended  the  common 
schools  and  the  Chase  Preparatory  School  while  not  engaged  upon  his 
father's  farm.  Believing  his  fortunes  lay  in  a  mercantile  direction,  he 
entered  as  clerk  a  store  in  Meriden,  Ct.,  and  from  1852  to  i860  was  en- 
gaged in  the  dry  goods  trade  and  manufacturing.  In  1854,  with  N.  L. 
Bradley,  the  Bradley  &  Hubbard  Manufacturing  Company  was  founded, 
now  doing  the  largest  manufacturing  trade  in  its  line  of  any  in  the 
world,  and  having  stores  in  Boston,  New  York  and  Chicago.  Their  im- 
mense factory  at  Meriden,  Ct.,  covers  seven  acres  of  ground  and  em- 
ploys hundreds  of  workmen,  who  earn  good  wages  and  never  strike, 
and  whose  welfare  is  most  carefully  looked  after  by  the  firm.  They 
manufacture  lamps,  lighting  fixtures,  bronzes  and  art  metal  goods  of 
an  infinite  number  of  designs  and  varieties. 

Mr.  HUBBARD  is  deservedly  wealthy,  and  applies  the  money  accu- 
mulated by  his  energy,  industry  and  keen  business  ability  to  the  most 


PROMINENT  AM  ERIC  AN  11 1  '1111 A  RDS. 

appropriate  and  humane  purposes.  His  integrity  is  marked,  and  his 
business  record  and  private  life  clean  and  spotless.  For  his  adopted 
town  he  erected  the  finest  hotel  in  the  State,  and  gave  it  a  famous  New 
England  name,  "  The  Winthrop."  He  has  traveled  extensively,  circling 
the  world  with  friends  in  1883-4.  His  library  is  well  selected,  and  with 
no  desire  for  political  preferment  frequently  tendered  to  him  he  devotes 
his  leisure  moments  among  his  books  and  art  treasures.  Mr.  HUB- 
BARD is  President  of  the  Bradley  &  Hubbard  Manufacturing  Com- 
pany, the  Meriden  Trust  &  Safe  Deposit  Company,  besides  being  a  Di- 
rector in  different  institutions  and  banks.  He  is  also  a  member  of  the 
Union  League  Club,  the  New  England  Society  and  the  American  < 
graphical  Society  of  New  York  City.  In  1852  he  married  Abby  Ann 
Bradley,  daughter  of  Levi  Bradley,  of  Cheshire,  Ct.,  and  sister  of  his 
partner,  N.  L.  Bradley.  She  died  four  months  after  marriage,  in  Feb- 
ruary, 1853,  aged  20,  from  fever  contracted  in  nursing  her  mother,  then 
undergoing  a  serious  and  fatal  sickness.  She  was  a  very  beautiful 
young  woman  and  possessed  of  many  virtues.  Mr.  HUBBARD  never 
married  again. 

LEVERETT  MARSDEN  HUBBARD,  son  of  Rev.  Eli  and  Georgi- 
anna  (Leach)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Durham,  Ct.,  April  2^,  1S49,  and  edu- 
cated at  Wesleyan  Academy,  Wilbraham,  Mass.,  and  Wesleyan  Univer- 
sity, Middletown,  Ct.  He  graduated  from  the  Albany  (X.  V.)  Law 
School  in  1870,  and  settled  in  August  of  that  year  in  Wallingford,  Ct., 
where  he  has  earned  distinction  as  one  of  the  first  criminal  lawyers  in 
Connecticut,  being  at  one  time  counsel  in  the  famous  Hayden-Stannard 
murder  case,  and  also  the  case  of  "Anderson,  the  Swede."  Leading 
corporations  throughout  the  country  have  also  used  his  legal  talent 
to  advantage.  His  executive  ability,  sterling  character,  and  high  stand- 
ing in  business  circles  had  naturally  led  to  his  selection  for  many 
administrative  positions  of  trust,  responsibility  and  honor. 

In  1872  President  Grant  appointed  him  postmaster  at  Wallingford. 
He  was  reappointed  successively  until  after  the  inauguration  of  President 
Cleveland  in  1885,  when  he  resigned  with  an  unexpired  commission  of 
three  years.  In  token  of  their  appreciation,  without  regard  to  party, 
his  fellow-citizens  tendered  him  a  farewell  banquet.  <  >ther  important 
positions  he  has  held  have  been  Borough  Attorney  since  [870,  member 
of  the  Board  of  Education,  vice-president  and  director  in  the  ; 
National  Bank  of  Wallingford  since  its  organization  in  1881;  also  vice- 
president  and  director  of  the  Dime  Savings  Bank  since  1884,  being  now 
its  President.  In  188 1  he  was  elected  trustee  of  the  Wesleyan  Academy. 
hisalma  mater.  He  was  elected  in  18S6  the  first  Judgeof  the  Muni 
Court  of  Wallingford,  which  position  he  still  holds.     He  is  associated 


,24  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

with  John  W.  Ailing,  one  of  Connecticut's  leading-  lawyers.  In  1886 
Mr.  HUBBARD  was  elected  Secretary  of  State  by  the  largest  vote 
given  any  candidate  for  a  State  office  in  that  election,  and  during  his 
two  years  of  service  in  that  important  and  honorable  position  he  gained 
universal  honor  and  esteem  for  the  intelligence,  fidelity  and  enterprise 
that  marked  his  administration. 

The  mother  of  Mr.  HUBBARD,  Georgiana  Leach,  was  the  daughter 
of  a  prominent  merchant  of  Durham,  Leverett  Woodbridge  Leach. 
She  died  in  1852,  and  Mr.  HUBBARD  spent  his  childhood  with  his 
grandparents.  In  1873  he  married  Florence  Gazelle  Ives,  dau  Wooster 
Ives,  of  Wallingford.  Children — Georgianna,  Samuel  Wolcott,  Lev- 
erett Marsden  and  Kenneth  Davenport. 

JOHN  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford, 
Ct.),  son  of  John  and  Mary  (Ball)  Hubbard,  of  Townsend,  Mass.,  was 
born  in  Townsend  Aug  8,  1759,  a  posthumous  child.  He  graduated  from 
Dartmouth  College  in  1785  and  studied  theology,  but  a  vocal  weakness 
forced  him  to  abandon  a  contemplated  ministerial  career,  and  he  there- 
fore became  a  teacher,  becoming  the  first  Preceptor  of  New  Ipswich, 
(N.  H.)  Academy  in  1789-95.  In  1 798-1802  he  was  the  Probate  Judge 
for  Cheshire  Co.,  N.  H.,  and  in  1805  a  Professor  of  Mathematics  and 
Philosophy  at  Dartmouth.  He  published  an  "  Essay  on  Music"  and 
"  Hubbard's  Anthems,"  containing,  as  the  volume  relates,  "  Thirty  An- 
thems selected  from  the  works  of  Handel,  Purcell,  Croft  and  other  eminent 
European  authors  "  (which  were  sung  in  New  England  Churches  for 
many  years),  "Rudiments  of  Geography  "  and  the  "American  Reader." 
August  10,  i79i,he  married  Rebecca  Preston,  daughter  of  Dr.  John  and 
Rebecca  (Farrar)  Preston,  of  New  Ipswich,  N.  H.,  and  died  in  Han- 
over, N.  H.,  August  14,  1 8 10,  where  a  monument,  with  many  Latin  in- 
scriptions upon  it  testifies  to  his  worth  as  a  man,  author  and  scholar. 
His  widow  died  at  Dracut,  Mass.,  Apl  9,  1846,  aged  77.  Children — 
John  (b  Apl  7,  1792,  at  New  Ipswich,  N.  H.,  d  there  Aug  5,  i860,  m 
Mary  Kennedy  of  Mason,  N.  H.,  and  had  Mary  Ann,  George  Henry, 
Harriett  Bellozvs,  Edwin,  John,  Charles  and  Josephine),  Josiah  (b  July 
24,  1793,  at  New  Ipswich,  N.  H.,  died  in  Lowell,  Mass.,  Jan  9,  1S71,  m 
Sep  23,  1814,  (1)  Mehitable  Zipporah  Whitmore  (d  July  21,  1863),  dau 
Gordon  and  Zipporah  (Woodward)  Whitmore  of  West  Lebanon,  N.  H., 
and  Nov  12,  1866,  (2)  Martha  Kimball  and  had  John  Gordon  (see 
Abridged  Descent  Line);  Harriet  Woodward,  b  Dec  19,  1815,  m  June 
16,  1833,  Capt  Simon  Moody  of  Limington,  Me.;  Clarissa  Whitmore,  b 
Nov  20,  1817,  d  Dec  5,  1880;  Rebecca  Preston,  b  Mch  31,  1820,  d  May  2, 
1882,  m  Nov  22,  1849,  Dr.  Moses  E.  Sweat,  of  Limington;  Marie 
Lncretia,  b  Apl  2,  1822,  d  Mch  25,  1838;  and  Lncy  Bancroft,  b  Jan   17, 


PROMINENT  AMERICAN  HUB  BARDS.  325 

1830,    d  May  30,    1877,  m  Henry  L.   S.  McLanahan),  Harriet  (b  Nov 
9,  1800,  at  Walpole,  N.  H.,  d    1886,  at  Lowell,  Mass.,  m  in  May,   1822, 
Abel  Conant  of  New  Ipswich,  and  had  John,  Harriet,  Maria,  Horace 
J.,  Sarah  habcllc,  James  Edward,  George  and  ,  Inn  /:.),  and  G 1  orgi    W. 
(b  Dec  2,  1808,  at  Hanover  N.  H.,  d  at  Rosas  Bar,  Cal.,  Dec  25,  1849,  m 
in  May,  1837,  Emma  Burge  of  Hollis,  N.  H.,  lived  in  Mexico  and  Hindu- 
stan, India,  and  had  George,  Harriet,  Clarissa,  Clara  Ann  and  Emma). 
RICHARD  DUDLEY  HUBBARD   (descended  from  George  Hub- 
bare  of  Guilford,  Ct.),  son  of  Lemuel  and  Elizabeth  (Dudley)  Hubbard 
was  born  in  Berlin,  Ct.,  Sep  7,  1818,  and  was  "  early  left  an  orphan  with 
means  barely  sufficient  for  his  education."     He  graduated  from  Yale  in 
1839,  studied  law  with  the  late  William   Hungerford  of  Hartford,  and 
was  admitted  to  the  county  bar  in  1842.     This   same    year  he  married 
Mary  Morgan,  of  Hartford,  Ct.     He  was  a  member  of  the  Connecticut 
Legislature  and  State's  Attorney  for  Hartford  County  from    1X46  to 
186S  with  the  exception  of  two  years,  and  a  member  of  the  law  firm  of 
Waldo,   Hubbard  &  Hyde,   Hartford,  Ct.     In    1867   he  was  elected  to 
Congress   as   a  Democrat,   but  declined  re-election.     In   1876  he    was 
elected  Governor  of  that  State,  being  the  first  to  serve  under  the  two- 
years  term.     During  the  late  civil  war  he  was  an  earnest  Unionist.     He 
died   in    Hartford,    Ct„    Feb    28,    1884,   leaving    a    widow  and    several 
children.     As  an  example  of  the  self-made  man  there  is  probably  none 
more  shining.     From  a  poor  boy,  through  years  of  patient  toil  and  a 
studious  application  to  books  he  forced  himself  to  the  top  and  compelled 
the  admiration,  respect  and  esteem  of  everybody  in  his  native  State,  not 
excepting  his  political  foes.     He  was  not  only  the  first  lawyer  in  the  State, 
but  its  greatest  orator.     His  mind  was  eminently  a  philosophical  one, 
and  found  recreation  in  the  study  of  philosophical  systems  and  abstract 
speculation.     His  success  was  attributed  largely  to  great  natural  powers. 
superadded  to  which,  though,  was  scholarly  culture  and   the   utmost 
familiarity  with  the  ancient  and  modern  classics.     Upon  the  death  oi 
Mr.  George  D.  Sargent  in  1886  it  was   found  that  a  bequest   of  $5,000 
had    been   made  in   his   will    toward  the    erection  of    a  statue  to    Mr. 
HUBBARD.     The  statue  was  begun  and  finished,  the   designer  being 
Mr.  Karl  Gerhardt,  and  was  im veiled  June  9,   1890,  in  the  presence  oi 
the  highest  officials  of  the  State  and  Bar.     A  bronze  tablet  upon  it 
bears  the  brief   description:    "RICHARD   D.   HUBBARD,   Lawyer, 
Orator,  Statesman."     It  stands  in  a  conspicuous  position  near  the  Capi- 
tol Building  upon  the  southeast  corner,  and  is  of  heroic  size,  cast    in 
bronze,  and  represents  him  standing  in  a  natural  position  as  though  ad- 
dressing the  Court  or  J  urv.  Children— Dudley (b  1849),  Win  eam(d  .850), 
Catherine  (b  1853),  Henry  (b  1855),  Mary  (bi859),  and  Nellie  (bi86i). 


J 


2 6  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 


HENRY  GRISWOLD  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hub- 
bard of  Middletown,  Ct),  second  son  of  Elijah  and  Lydia  (Mather) 
Hubbard,  was  born  in  Middletown,  Ct.,  Oct  8,  1814,  and  attended  suc- 
cessively Captain  Partridge's  Military  Academy  at  Norwich,  Vt,  the 
Ellington  High  School  and  Wesleyan  University  at  Middletown.  It 
was  as  plain  as  the  midday  sun  that  his  capacity  was  abnormally  a  busi- 
ness one  and  that  he  was  destined  to  command  men  and  mark  out  great 
fields  of  enterprise.  His  training  field  was  in  New  York  City  in  the 
woolen  goods  house  of  Jabez  Hubbard,  in  Middletown  later,  in  1833,  at 
the  age  of  19,  as  partner  of  Jesse  G.  Baldwin,  dry  goods  merchant,  and 
at  the  age  of  21  as  Manager  of  the  Russell  Manufacturing  Company. 
Subsequently  (1844)  he  became  a  Director  in  the  Middletown  National 
Bank  and  President  of  the  Middletown  Savings  Bank.  In  1866  he  was 
elected  State  Senator  from  the  18th  Connecticut  Senatorial  District, 
but  he  much  preferred  business  activity  to  the  honors  of  political  prefer- 
ment, and  thereafter  devoted  himself  principally  to  affairs  requiring 
the  genius  of  skillful  and  shrewd  business  managers.  He  of  course 
became  wealthy  because  of  the  possession  of  these  faculties  and  left 
a  large  estate.  Of  a  decisive  nature,  he  trusted  nearly  always  to 
his  own  peculiar  powers  of  discrimination  in  his  charitable  donations, 
giving  alike  to  Catholic,  Jew,  or  Gentile  institutions  as  the  emergency 
appealed  to  his  own  particular  view.  He  knew  nearly  all  his  employe's 
by  name,  and  was  easily  approached  by  them.  He  was  a  gentleman  of 
magnificent  personal  appearance.  June  19,  1844,  he  married  Charlotte 
Rosella  McDonough,  daughter  of  Commodore  Thomas*  and  Lucy  Ann 
(Shaler)  McDonough.  HENRY  GRISWOLD  HUBBARD  died  July  29> 
1 89 1,  and  was  buried  in  Indian  Hill  Cemetery  at  Middletown.  Children — 
Margaret  Sill  (b  Mch  30,  1745,  has  traveled  extensively,  lives  in  Mid- 
dletown), Lucy  McDonough  (b  Nov  6,  1846,  d  Feb  2,  1876,  the  wife  of 
Samuel  Russell  of  the  Russell  Manufacturing  Company  of  Middletown) 
and  Charlotte  Elizabeth  (b  June  3,  1848,  d  Mch  14,  1850.) 

*  Commodore  Thomas  McDonough  was  well  known  in  naval  circles  and  elsewhere  as  the  hero  of 
Lake  Champlain.  He  was  born  in  New  Castle  County,  Del.,  in  1783,  and  died  of  ill  health  Nov  10, 1825, 
while  returning  from  a  sea  voyage,  his  body  being  brought  home  on  the  ship  in  a  cask  of  brandy  to 
preserve  it,  where  it  was  buried  alongside  of  his  wife  in  Riverside  Cemetery  at  Middletown.  At  19  he 
wTas  in  the  Navy,  and  with  Commodore  Decatur  in  the  Mediterranean,  and  at  one  time  commanded 
the  old  heroic  "Constitution."  His  principal  brilliant  naval  exploit,  however,  was  in  disastrously 
defeating  Sep  11,  1813,  upon  Lake  Champlain  the  British  ships  Conflance,  Linnet,  Chubb,  Finch,  and  12 
gallies,  commanded  by  Commodore  Downie  with  95  guns  and  1050  men,  with  his  inferior  fleet  of  86 
guns,  820  men,  and  ships  Saratoga,  Eagle,  Ticonderoga,  Preble  and  10  gallies.  This  was  a  remarkable 
victory.  Commodore  Downie  surrendered  and  Sir  George  Provost  who  was  supporting  the  British 
fleet  at  Plattsburgh  rapidly  retreated,  while  Commodore  McDonough  received  thanks,  medals  and 
resolutions  of  gratitude  from  Congress  and  the  nation  at  large.  The  brownstone  shaft  in  the  ceme- 
tery bears  record  of  his  distinguished  services  to  his  country,  and  is  situated  close  to  the  entrance, 
near  the  site  where  George  Hubbard  is  supposed  to  have  been  buried. 


PROMINENT  AMERICAN  HUB  BARDS.  327 

LUCIUS  FREDERICK  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hub- 
bard of  Guilford,  Ct),  eldest  son  of  Charles  Frederick  and  Margaret 
(Van  Valkenburg)  Hubbard,  was  born  Jan  26,  1836,  at  Troy,  N.  Y., 
where  his  father  was  sheriff  of  Renssalaer  County.  His  early  life  was 
spent  in  Chester,  Vt.,  and  Granville,  N.  Y.  At  the  age  of  fifteen  he  left 
Granville  and  went  to  Poultney,  Vt.  In  1854  he  removed  to  Chicago 
and  there  worked  at  the  tinner's  trade  for  three  years.  He  was  entirely 
self-educated,  being  thoroughly  inclined  toward  literary  studies  and  in- 
vestigations, and  from  the  age  of  fifteen  had  devoted  himself  during  all 
his  spare  time  to  systematic  study  and  reading,  being  satisfied  with 
nothing  less  than  a  complete  mastery  of  whatever  subject  absorbed  his 
attention.  In  1857  he  moved  to  Red  Wing,  Minn.,  and  started  the 
Red  Wing  Republican,  the  second  paper  in  Goodhue  County.  From  the 
very  first  the  paper  proved  a  success,  and  still  remains,  a  living  monu- 
ment to  its  founder.  In  the  fall  of  1858  he  was  chosen  by  the  people  of 
Goodhue  County  to  his  first  elective  office,  that  of  register  of  deeds. 

In  December,  1861,  he  enlisted  as  a  private  in  Company  A,  5th  Min- 
nesota Infantry  Volunteers.  On  the  fifth  of  February,  1862,  he  was 
elected  captain,  and  March  20,  1862,  advanced  to  the  rank  of  lieutenant- 
colonel.  On  August  31,  1862,  he  became  a  colonel.  As  regimental  and 
brigade  commander  he  participated  in  thirty-two  engagements  during 
the  war  and  "for  conspicuous  gallantry  at  the  battles  of  Nashville, 
Tenn.,  Dec.  15  and  16,  1864,"  he  was  brevetted  Brigadier-General.  He 
was  mustered  out  in  October,  1865,  and  returned  to  Red  Wing  with 
shattered  health,  the  result  of  over  fatigue  and  exposure.  In  1866,  his 
health  having  returned,  he  engaged  in  the  grain  business  at  Red  Wing. 
In  1 87 2  he  was  elected  to  the  State  Senate,  and  again  in  1874.  In  the 
fall  of  1 881  Gen.  HUBBARD  was  nominated  for  Governor  of  Minne- 
sota, and  was  elected  by  a  majority  of  27,857,  the  largest  ever  received 
by  a  Governor  elected  in  that  State.  In  1883  he  was  renominated  and 
re-elected  by  a  large  majority.  He  is  now  president  of  the  United  States 
Savings  and  Loan  Company  of  St.  Paul,  as  well  as  manager  of  the 
Duluth,  Red  Wing  and  Southern  Railroad,  with  headquarters  at  Red 
Wing,  Minn. 

For  nearly  forty  years  a  prominent  citizen  of  Minnesota,  he  has  honor- 
ably linked  his  name  with  the  splendid  record  and  the  magnificent  de- 
velopment of  his  State.  By  his  conspicuous  gallantry  during  our  great 
civil  war,  by  his  creditable  service  in  the  State  Senate,  and  by  his  wise, 
efficient  and  honest  administration  as  governor  for  five  years,  he  has 
conferred  honor  upon  his  State.  He  married  in  May,  186S,  at  Red 
Wing,  Amelia  Thomas.  Children— Charles  Frederick,  Julia  Mary 
and  Lucius  Virgilius. 


328  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GEXEALOGY. 

BELA  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford, 
Ct.),  fourth  son  of  Daniel  and  Diana  (Ward)  Hubbard,  was  born  August 
27,  T739,  in  Guilford,  Ct.  He  graduated  at  Yale  College  in  1758  (which 
in  1804  conferred  upon  him  the  degree  of  D.D.),  and  afterward  studied 
theology  at  King's  (now  Columbia)  College,  under  the  instruction  of  its 
President,  Rev.  Dr.  Johnson.  In  1763  he  crossed  the  ocean  with  his 
friend  Rev.  (afterward  Bishop)  Jarvis  to  obtain  holy  orders,  there 
being  no  Bishop  in  this  country.  He  was  ordained  Deacon  by  the  Rt. 
Rev.  Dr.  Frederick  Keppel,  Bishop  of  Exeter,  in  King's  Chapel,  London, 
Feb  5,  1764,  and  Priest  by  Rt.  Rev.  Dr.  Charles  Lyttleton,  Bishop  of 
Carlisle,  in  St.  James  Church,  Westminster,  Feb  19,  1764.  Returning 
from  England  he  officiated  at  Guilford  and  Killingworth,  Ct.,  until 
1767,  when  "the  Society  for  Propagating  the  Gospel  in  Foreign  Parts" 
appointed  him  their  missionary  at  New  Haven.  He  remained  loyal  to 
the  King  of  Great  Britain  during  the  Revolutionary  struggle,  and  in 
consequence  was  able  to  protect  the  personal  property  of  many  of  his 
parishioners  during  the  occupancy  of  New  Haven  by  the  British  Army. 
It  is  related  of  him  that  he  guarded  the  personal  valuables  of  his  parish- 
ioners in  his  church  by  standing  in  its  doors  with  his  vestments  on  as 
the  British  soldiers  passed  by.  They,  recognizing  him  as  of  the  Church 
of  England,  did  not,  out  of  respect  for  the  cloth,  attempt  to  enter  and 
loot  the  premises.  He  also,  it  is  further  said,  saved  from  destruction  a 
young  girl  who  was  being  pursued  by  a  ruffianly  British  soldier.  After 
the  Revolution  he  organized  the  Parish  of  Trinity  Church  in  that  City 
and  remained  its  rector  until  his  death,  December  6,  181 2,  in  the  48th 
year  of  his  ministry  and  the  74th  of  his  age.  His  tombstone  in  the 
cemetery  at  New  Haven  bears  the  following  inscription: 

Amiable  in  all  the  relations  of  life,  he  was  an  able,  tender,  and  diligent  pastor,  the  friend  of  the 
poor  and  the  comfort  of  the  afflicted.  Eminent  for  his  charity,  he  was  greatly  beloved.  After  a  long 
life  of  successful  labor  in  the  edification  of  the  Church,  he  departed  in  faith  and  hope,  ardent  for  the 
crown  of  righteousness.  In  testimony  of  their  affectionate  regard  to  the  memory  of  their  beloved 
pastor,  a  grateful  people  have  erected  this  monumental  stone. 

A  bronze  tablet  to  his  memory  is  also  erected  in  the  chancel  of  Trinity 
Church,  where  he  did  such  faithful  service. 


&  facsimile  of  his  signature: 


<%*&Jh/tva 


He  married  in  May,  1768,  at  Fairfield,  Ct.,  Grace  Dunbar  Hill,  dau  of 
Thaddeus  and  Elizabeth  (Isaacs)  Hill  (born  in  the  Island  of  Antigua  in 
1747,  died  in  1820).  Children — John  James  (b  1769,  d  1823),  Nancy  (b 
1770,  d  1796),  Grace  (b  and  d  in  1772),  Bela  (b  1773,  d  1841),  Grace  (b 
1775,  d  1777),  Elizabeth  (b  1777,  m  Hon.  Timothy  Pitkin),  Thomas  Hill 
(see  elsewhere  under  Prominent  American  Hubbards),  Frederick  (b 
1-79,  d  1822)  and  William  Henry  (b  1786,  d  1792). 


PROMINENT  AMERICAN  HUBBARDS. 


329 


GURDON  SALTONSTALL  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George 
Hubbard,  of  Guilford,  Ct),  eldest  child  of  Elizur  and  Abigail 
(Sage)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Windsor,  Vt,  Aug  22,  1802.  His 
father,  a  lawyer,  settled  in  Montreal,  Canada,  in  1815,  where 
Gurdo'n,  who  disliked  schools  and  books,  clerked  in  a  hardware  store. 
In  April,  1 81 3,  he  embarked  with  a  party  for  five  years'  service  with 
the  American  Fur  Company,  controlled  by  John  Jacob  Astor,  of  New 
York  He  passed  an  eventful  life  in  its  employ,  enduring  the  customary 
pioneer's  hardship,  and  participating  in  the  Black  Hawk  Indian  Y\  ar 
with  his  company  of  150  men  who  marched  250  miles  in  seven  days. 
He  was  the  most  famous  walker  in  the  Northwest  at  that  time,  estab- 
lishing «  Hubbard's  Trail,"  and  walking  in  March,  1823,  75  miles  over 
a  wild  rough  country  between  daylight  and  darkness,  and  outstripping 
a  famous  Indian  walker  who  had  been  pitted  against  him  unbeknown 
to  GURDON  The  Indians  called  him  Pa-pa-ma-ta-be,  the  swiit 
walker  "  He  entered  Ft.  Dearborn  October  1,  1818,  and  thereafter  was 
closely  identified  with  its  (Chicago's)  interests.  He  says  Chicago  de- 
rived'its  name  from  the  Indian  word  "chi-cack"  (onion)  and  not  from 
«  chi-goug  "  (skunk)  as  some  claim.  In  .  83 1  he  married  Elenora  Berry, 
of  Urbana,  Ohio,  and  on  his  wedding  trip  saved  from  drowning  m  the 


3  3o  HUBBA  R  D  HIS  TOR  Y  AND   GENE  A  LOGY. 

Ohio  River,  filled  with  ice,  the  young  son  of  Mr.  Linton,  a  merchant  of 
Terra  Haute,  Ind.  The  grateful  father  immediately  changed  the  boy's 
name  to  Gurdon  Saltonstall  Hubbard  Linton.  His  first  wife  died  in 
1838,  and  he  then  married  his  cousin,  Mary  Ann  Hubbard,  daughter  of 
Ahira  and  Serena  (Tucker)  Hubbard.  She  was  born  in  18 14.  He 
wrote  the  first  insurance  policy  in  Chicago,  established  the  first  pack- 
ing-house, helped  organize  the  first  Episcopal  church,  inaugurated  the 
first  line  of  packets  between  Chicago  and  Buffalo,  built  the  Lake 
House  (the  first  large  hotel),  was  a  director  in  the  company  that  started 
Chicago's  famous  water-works  and  was  one  of  the  first  trustees  to 
found  the  "Town  of  Chicago,  Feb  11,  1835."  He  helped  organize 
the  Chicago  Board  of  Trade,  became  a  member  of  the  State  Legisla- 
ture, a  director  in  both  a  State  and  a  savings  bank,  and,  in  fact,  was 
active  in  nearly  all  of  Chicago's  important  early  enterprises.  He  be- 
came blind  during  the  last  two  years  of  his  life,  and  patiently  and  in 
darkness  awaited  heavenly  light,  which  came  September  14,  1886.  His 
name  is  syonomous  with  charity,  patriotism,  integrity  and  morality. 

JOHN  HENRY  HUBBARD  (descended  from  John  Hubbard  of 
Pomfret,  Ct.),  youngest  son  of  Parley  and  Anne  (Catlin)  Hubbard,  was 
born  in  Salisbury,  Litchfield  County,  Ct.,  in  1S04.  He  applied  himself 
diligently  to  study  in  the  district  schools,  becoming  eventually  a  good 
Latin  scholar  and  mathematician,  and  at  fifteen  years  was  qualified  to 
teach  a  district  school.  He  afterward  studied  law  in  the  office  of  Hon. 
Elisha  Sterling,  a  prominent  lawyer  of  Salisbury,  and  before  his 
twenty-second  birthday  was  admitted  to  the  bar,  establishing  himself  at 
Lakeville,  Ct.,  where  he  resided  for  thirty  years.  His  industry  and  per- 
severance brought  him  to  the  front  and  secured  for  him  a  very  hand- 
some estate.  In  1847  and  in  1849  ne  was  elected  to  the  State  Senate 
from  the  Seventeenth  District,  where  he  distinguished  himself  by  suc- 
cessful opposition  to  the  movement  to  bridge  the  Connecticut  River  at 
Middletown.  Twenty  years  later,  however,  he  saw  that  result  achieved. 
In  1849  he  was  appointed  State's  Attorney  for  Litchfield  County  and 
held  that  office  four  years.  He  was  known  as  one  of  the  "  Conscience 
Whigs  "  until  the  formation  of  the  Republican  party,  when  he  became 
an  active  local  leader  in  it.  The  cause  of  Unionism  was  dear  to  him, 
and  he  became  its  zealous  client,  sacrificing  in  consequence  much  of 
his  business  and  estate  to  further  its  integrity.  He  helped  to  recruit 
the  Thirteenth  and  Nineteenth  Connecticut  regiments,  and  gave  freely 
of  his  funds  to  the  men  and  their  needy  families.  In  the  spring  of  1863 
he  was  elected  to  the  Thirty-eighth  Congress  and  re-elected  in  1865  to 
the  Thirty-ninth  from  the  Fourth  District.  At  Washington  he  labored 
faithfully  for  the  public  weal. 


HON.    JOHN    HENRY    HUBBARD,    M.    C, 
of  Litchfield,  Ct. 

(Descended  from  John  Hubbard  of  Pomfret,  Ct.) 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY, 
oo- 

June  i,  1864,  more  than  four  hundred  men  of  his  own  count)' regi- 
ment (Nineteenth  Conn.  Vols.)  were  killed  and  wounded.  They  were 
his  neighbors,  acquaintances  and  friends.  Many  of  them  had  enlisted  at 
his  solicitation.  It  was  an  anxious  time.  Every  hour  that  he  could  snatch 
from  his  public  duty  he  devoted  to  the  soldiers.  There  was  not  a  day 
that  he  did  not  visit  one  or  more  of  the  Washington  hospitals.  He 
sought  out  every  Connecticut  man,  sat  by  their  bedsides,  wrote  letters 
for  them  and  procured  for  those  who  were  unable  medicine  and  deli- 
cacies at  his  own  expense.  No  one  appealed  to  him  in  vain.  Many 
dying  messages  he  faithfully  transmitted  to  loved  ones  at  home.  He 
assisted  friends  to  identify  and  obtain  the  bodies  of  their  dead,  and  in 
more  than  one  instance  he  paid  for  embalming  bodies  to  be  sent  North, 
which  he  never  regretted.  He  always  declared  he  had  abundant  re- 
ward in  the  success  of  the  cause  for  which  these  men  fought.  After 
his  return  from  Congress  he  engaged  again  in  law  practice  and  con- 
tinued in  it  until  a  short  time  before  his  death,  which  occurred  July  30, 
1872. 

Mr.  HUBBARD  had  three  brothers,  Joseph  Augustus,  Hiram  Bos- 
worth  and  Alexander.  The  eldest,  Joseph  Augustus,  married 
Daphne  Bushnell,  rem  to  Bethany,  Wayne  County,  Pa.,  and  had  two 
sons,  Alonzo  and  Frederick.  Alonzo  (d  in  Geneseo,  111.,  Jan  31,  1873),  m 
(1)  S.  Anna  Brown  (d  Feb  18,  1864)  and  had  Edward  Bushnell,  b  Jan 
14,  1S49,  m  Emma  Waldron  of  Waverly,  N.  Y.,  and  had  Florence,  b  May 
27,  1876,  and  Ray,  b  Mch  17,  1879,  Inez  Elizabeth,  b  Aug  4, 185 2, m  Dec 
24,  1874,  Bruce  H.  Chamberlain  of  Chicago,  111.;  J.  Augustus,  b  Feb  20, 
1854,  rem  to  California  in  1875;  Eva  May,  b  Dec  4,  1861;  F.  Alonzo,  b 
Mch  9,  1863,  rem  to  Honesdale,  Pa.;  Alonzom  (2)  Mrs.  Dency  W.  Yassar 
of  New  York  and  had  George  Raymond,  b  Feb  22,  1867,  rem  to  Bethany 
Pa.;  and  Harry  S.  C,  b  May  21,  1872,  rem  to  Jersey  City,  N.  J.  Fred- 
erick (d  Feb  28,  1875),  m  Elizabeth  Brown  of  Lebanon,  Pa.,  and  had 
Daphne  L.,  b  Aug  17,  1856,  m  Lucien  Mumford  of  Bethany,  Pa.,  and 
had  Winifred;  and  Lillian  Anna,  b  Dec  5,  i860.  Hiram  Bosworth  m 
Polly  Dean  and  died  March  21,  1869.  Alexander  m  Mandane  Van 
Deusen  and  had  Jane,  James  (enl  Aug  15,  1862,  served  in  2d  Regt 
Conn.  Vols  as  Capt,  Major,  Lieut-Col  and  Col,  and  Apl  6,  1865,  was 
breve tted  Brig.  General),  John,  Henry,  Edwin  (in  War  of  Rebellion) 
and  A  nna. 

Mr.  HUBBARD  m  Sep  18,  1865,  Abbey  Jane  Wells.  Children— 
John  Tomlinson  (b  Nov  30,  1856,  unm,  a  well-known  lawyer  of  Litch- 
field, Ct.),  Ann  Electa  (b  June  9,  1859,  unm),  Philip  Parley  (b  June 
9,  1850,  unm),  and  Frank  Wells  (b  Aug  2,  1865,  m  Nov  18,  1S91,  Grace 
W.  Keese  of  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  and  had  Grace  Louise,  b  Mch  18,  1893). 


PROMINENT  AMERICAN  HUBBARDS.  333 

CHESTER  DORMAN  HUBBARD  (descended  from  William  Hub- 
bard of  Ipswich,  Mass.),  son  of  Dana  and  Asenath  (Dorman)  Hubbard, 
was  born  Nov  25,  18 14,  in  Hamden,  New  Haven  County,  Conn.,  and 
died  in  Wheeling,  West  Virginia,  Aug  23,  1891.  He  graduated  from 
Wesleyan  University,  Conn.,  in  1840,  and  removed  to  western  Pennsyl- 
vania in  1 8 15  and  to  Wheeling,  West  Va.,  in  1819  with  his  parents,  where 
in  1840-53  he  was  extensively  engaged  in  the  lumber  business;  during 
185 1-2  he  was  a  member  of  the  Virginia  House  of  Delegates;  President 
of  the  Bank  of  Wheeling  in  1853,  a  member  of  the  Richmond  Con- 
vention in  1 86 1,  and  voted  against  secession;  also  a  member  of  the 
Wheeling  Convention  which  adopted  the  restored  government  of  West 
Virginia;  a  member  of  W.  Va.  Senate  1S63-4;  a  member  of  the  National 
Republican  Convention  at  Baltimore  in  1864;  Republican  Congressman 
in  the  39th  and  40th  Congresses;  Secretary  of  the  Wheeling  Iron  and 
Nail  Company,  President  of  the  Pittsburg,  Wheeling  and  Ky.  R.  R.  Co., 
and  also  of  the  German  Bank  of  Wheeling,  and  a  member  of  the  Repub- 
lican National  Convention  in  1880. 

CHESTER  DORMAN  HUBBARD  was  one  of  the  foremost  figures 
in  his  city  and  State.  In  business,  politics,  education,  religion  and 
society  he  was  an  active  force  to  the  day  of  his  death,  and  always  for 
good.  His  tall,  spare  figure,  earnest  face  and  dignified,  kindly  bearing 
made  the  physical  man  noteworthy,  and  his  alert  intelligence,  liberal 
and  thoughtful  education,  firm  and  unselfish  purpose  made  him  an  in- 
tellectual and  moral  power.  His  name  meant  integrity,  not  merely 
obedience  to  the  civil  and  moral  law,  but  an  affirmative,  aggressive 
righteousness.  It  was  well  illustrated  by  his  refusal,  when  a  member 
of  Congress,  to  accept  the  back  pay  which  Congress  had  voted  to  its  mem- 
bers. The  City  of  Wheeling  owes  to  him  the  existence  of  considerable 
manufacturing  establishments  and  an  important  railway  line,  and  more 
than  to  any  one  else  the  original  establishment  of  its  free  school  system 
and  the  maintenance  of  higher  schools  for  both  sexes.  The  Methodist 
Episcopal  Church,  to  which  he  was  attached  through  life,  received  his 
best  support  and  service  in  all  branches  of  its  church  and  Sunday- 
school  work,  from  a  seat  in  its  general  conference  to  its  humblest 
position. 

In  politics  he  was  originally  a  Whig.  With  all  his  might  he  resisted 
secession,  voting  against  it  as  a  member  of  the  Virginia  Convention,  and 
coming  home  from  Richmond  to  aid  in  the  civil  and  military  organiza- 
tion of  the  Union  men  of  the  State.  He  called  to  order  the  first  Union 
Convention  of  the  State  and  was  a  delegate  to  the  succeeding  con- 
vention which  reorganized  the  government  of  Virginia,  and  paved  the 
way  for  the  formation  of  the  State  of  West  Virginia.     After  the  war 


iia  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

he  was  a  warm  adherent  of  the  Republican  party.  Perhaps  the  most 
remarkable  thing  in  his  long  career  was  his  youthfulness.  Through 
all  struggles  and  trials  this  was  manifest.  Age  wrought  lines  in  his 
face,  but  not  in  his  heart.  In  all  relations  of  life  he  drew  young  people  to 
him.  And  with  all  his  honors  and  duties  and  labors  he  was  greatest  in 
his  humility  and  charity,  and,  to  those  close  to  him,  in  his  tenderness. 
His  life  honored  the  name  of  Hubbard. 

He  married  Sep  29,  1842,  Sarah  Pallister,  of  Wheeling.  Children — 
William  Pallister  (b  Dec  24,  1843,  grad.  Wesleyan  University 
in  1863;  lawyer  at  Wheeling,  West  Va.;  served  in  West  Va.  Cav.;  Clerk 
of  the  House  of  Delegates  1866-70;  Secretary  Republican  State  Central 
Committee;  Delegate  to  Rep.  National  Convention  in  Cincinnati  in  1872; 
member  of  W.  Va.  House  of  Delegates  188 1-2;  member  Rep.  Nat. 
Conv.  1 888 ;  President  of  Pittsburg,  Wheeling  and  Ky.  R.  Co.,  he  m  May  2 1 , 
1868,  Anna  Elizabeth  Chamberlin  of  Thibodeaux,  La.,  and  had  Julia 
Payne,  who  m  Wilson  Irwin  Kelly;  Nelson  Chamberlin,  Alma  Russell, 
Louise  Pallister  and  Sarah  Pallister'),  Dana  List  (b  July  7,  1845,  m  Apl 
13,  1869,  Ann  Armstrong  Greer  and  had  Arthur  Greer,  Elizabeth  Pal- 
lister and  Ann  Greer),  Chester  Russell  (b  Oct  25,  1848,  President 
Wheeling  Steel  and  Iron  Company,  m  Feb  8,  1881,  Stella  Moore  and 
had  Stella  Russell,  Anna  Moore,  Helen  Pallister  and  Llda  Wilson), 
Julia  Alice  (b  Apl  it,  1850,  m  Feb  5,  1879,  Wat.  Henry  Tyler  and  had 
Louise  Pallister,  Chester  William  and  Nellie  Chamberlin),  and  Anna  Gill 
(b  Sep  1,  1852,  m  Oct  5,  1876,  Joseph  Caldwell  Brady  and  had  Marian 
Pallister,  Alice  Chamberlin,  Chester  Hubbard,  Hester  Virginia,  Ethel 
Russell,  Mildred  and  Marjory  Ncavc). 

SAMUEL  HUBBARD  (descended  from  William  Hubbard  of  Ips- 
wich, Mass.),  son  of  William  and  Joanna  (Perkins)  Hubbard,  was  born 
in  Boston,  Mass.,  June  2,  1785,  and  died  there  December  24,  1847,  a  dis- 
tinguished jurist,  scholar  and  citizen.  In  1802  he  graduated  from  Yale 
and  commenced  the  study  of  law.  After  his  admittance  to  the  bar,  he 
commenced  practice  at  Biddeford,  Me.,  taking  the  law  office  of  Judge 
Mellen  in  1806.  In  1810  he  returned  to  his  native  city  and  was  elected 
to  the  legislature  as  representative,  and  afterward  for  several  terms  as 
state  senator.  In  1827  Yale,  and  in  1842  Harvard  University  conferred 
upon  him  the  degree  of  LL.D.,  and  in  this  latter  year  he  was  elected  to 
the  high  office  of  Judge  of  the  Supreme  Court  of  Massachusetts,  which 
honor  he  held  until  his  death.  His  ancestry  upon  both  sides  has  been  a 
distinguished  one,  representing  the  best  element  that  left  England  to 
live  an  untrammelled  life  of  religious  liberty  in  New  England,  and  the 
element  that  naturally  fell  heir  to  the  power  to  govern  in  a  newly- 
formed  colony.     Gov.  John  Haynes,  Gov.  John  Leverett,  Sir  Richard 


PROMINENT  AMERICAN  HUBBARDS.  335 

Saltonstall  and  Rev.  William  Hubbard,  the  New  England  Historian,  all 
rose  up  prominently  in  earl}?-  colonial  life,  and  were  a  few  of  the  num- 
ber of  his  noted  ancestors.  Mr.  HUBBARD  married  June  8,  1815,  in 
Boston,  (1)  Mary  Anne  Greene,  b  in  Demerara,  British  Guiana,  Apl  19, 
1790,  d  July  10,  1S27,  dau  Gardiner  and  Elizabeth  (Hubbard)  Greene 
(Gardiner  Greene  was  born  Sep  23,  1753,  and  d  in  1832  the  wealthiest 
man  in  New  England).  Children  (by  Mary  Anne  Greene) — Elizabeth 
Greene  (b  in  Boston  Feb  n,  1817,  d  in  Andover,  Mass.,  May  14,  1890,  m 
June  S,  1841,  Edward  Buck,  bin  New  York  Oct  13,  1814,  Yale  1835,  din 
Andover  July  16,  1876,  and  had  Alice,  b  in  New  York  Apl  3,  1841;  and 
Walter,  b  in  Boston  Sep  29,  1S47,  Yale  1870,  m  Apl  10,  1888,  Mary  W. 
Lowrie,  b  Oct  31,  1861),  Joanna  Perkins  (b  in  Boston  Sep  26,  1818,  d  in 
Colchester,  Ct,  Aug  4,  1862,  m  in  Boston  in  1840  Philo  A.  Gillette,  a 
Boston  merchant,  b  in  Hebron,  Ct.,  in  1S10,  d  Jan  20,  1858,  and  had 
Joanna  H.,  b  Nov  2,  1841,  m  June  15,  187 1,  in  Norwich,  Ct.,  Theodore 
F.  McCurdy,  and  had  Theodora,  b  in  Norwich  Feb  8,  1873;  Samuel  H., 
b  Apl  15,  1S43,  enlisted  as  volunteer  from  Connecticut,  and  d  Dec  1, 
1862,  from  disease  contracted  in  the  service;  Aitgusta  P.,  b  Oct  5,  1849; 
Grace  W.,  b  Aug  1,  1852,  d  in  Norwich,  Ct.,  July  n,  1876;  Elizabeth  M., 
b  Nov  5,  1854,  d  in  San  Remo,  Italy,  Mch  14,  1892;  and  Florence,  b  July 
15,  1S57),  Mary  Anne  (b  Sep  7,  1820,  d  July  25,  1864,  m  Oct  26,  1837, 
Edgcumb  Heath  Blatchford,  a  lawyer  of  New  York,  b  Mch  24,  181 1,  d 
Feb  14,  1853,  and  had  Mary  Edgcumb,  b  Aug  13,  1838;  Ethlinda  Jane,  b 
Jan  12,  1841,  d  June  9,  1872,  in  Switzerland,  m  June  25,  1865,  Samuel 
Hubbard  Scudder  and  had  Gardiner  Hubbard;  Alice  Windeatt,  b  Jan  8, 
1S43,  d  Apl  28,  1845;  Grace  Vernon,  b  May  13,  1845,  d  Oct  24,  1861;  and 
Caroline  Hubbard,  b  June  10,  185 1),  Gardiner  Greene  (see  elsewhere 
under  Prominent  American  Hubbards),  Caroline  (b  in  Boston  May  n, 
1S26,  d  in  Norwich,  Ct.,  Nov  15,  1868,  m  Jan  15,  1852,  Theodore  F. 
McCurdy  of  New  York,  b  Feb  7,  1829,  and  had  Gertrude  Mercer,  b  Nov 
25,  1S52,  d  Sep,  1883,  m  Feb  7,  1882,  Stanford  Marsh,  and  had  Theodore 
F.  McCurdy,  b  Sep,  18S3;  Caroline  Gardiner,  b  Oct  18,  1857;  and 
Augusta  Greene,  b  May  2,  1859).  Hon.  SAMUEL  HUBBARD  then 
m  Oct  28,  1828  (2)  Mary  Anne  Coit,  b  in  New  York  City,  Jan  21,  1795, 
dau  of  Elisha  and  Rebecca  (Manwaring)  Coit,  and  widow  of  Rev.  Henry 
Blatchford.  Children  (by  Mary  Anne  Coit) — Sarah  Wisner  (b  Aug  16, 
1S29,  in  Boston,  d  Feb  26,  1856),  Samuel  (b  in  Boston  June  18,  1831, rem 
to  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  m  Aug  12,  1856,  Sophie  Hunt,  b  in  New  York 
Nov  15,  1836,  and  had  Katherinc,  b  in  San  Francisco  June  18,  1861,  m 
Oct  2i,  1885,  Capt.  John  McE.  Hyde,  U.  S.  A.;  Samuel,  b  May  17,  1863; 
Mary  Winthrop,  b  Sep  5,  1864,  m  Apl  30,  1890,  Dr.  William  D.  Swan  of 
Cambridge,  Mass.,  and  had  Marian,  b  1891,  and  William,  b  1894;  William 


00 


6  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Babcock,  b  Feb  22,  1867;  and  Charles  Parker,  b  Jan  26,  1870),  Henry 
Blatchford  (b  Jan  8,  1833,  d  in  Chicago  Feb  13,  1862),  William  Coit 
(b  in  Boston  Sep  23,  1834,  rem  to  Chicago  Jan  5,  1865,  m  May  21,  1857, 
Alice  Frances  Hammond,  and  had  William  Hammond,  b  in  Chicago 
Mch  5,  1858,  Harvard  1879,  m  Oct  15,  1884,  Susan  Campbell  Weare,  b  at 
Cedar  Rapids,  Iowa,  Apl  9,  1863,  dan  John  and  Martha  (Campbell) 
Weare,  of  Derby  Line,  Canada,  Allegan,  Mich.,  and  later,  Cedar  Rapids; 
William  Hammond  Hubbard  vs>  Treasurer  of  the  Hutchins  Refrigerator 
Car  Company  of  Chicago,  and  has  children  Martha  Weare  b  July  22,  18S6; 
Alice  Frances  b  Jan  20,  1889;  and  Eleanor,  b  Sep  13,  1891;  and  Henry 
M.,  b  in  Chicago  Feb  9,  i860,  Harvard  1882),  James  Mascerene  (b  in 
Boston  Aug  15,  1836,  Yale  1S60,  m  in  New  Haven  Oct  16,  1861,  Sarah 
Hill  Tomlinson,  b  there  Dec  15,  1839,  and  had  Florence  Mascerene, 
b  in  Boston  Nov  27,  1864,  m  Jan  12,  1893,  Robert  Rantoul  of  St. 
Paul,  Minn.,  and  had  Florence  Mascerene,  b  Dec  31,  1893,  d  Jan  2,  1894; 
Roberta  Wolcott,  b  Mch  23,  1869,  d  May  11,  1879;  and  Paul  Mascerene,  b 
Aug  16,  1876)  and  Charles  Eustis  (b  in  Boston  Aug  7,  1842,  Yale  1862, 
a  volunteer  from  Massachusetts  in  the  late  civil  war;  enlisted  in  Aug, 
1862,  in  Co.  A,  45th  Mass.  Vols.,  a  9-months  regiment;  mustered  out  in 
July  or  August,  1863;  m  Dec  10,  1872,  Caroline  Dennie  Tracy,  b  Aug 
25,  1847,  dau  Frederick  Uriah  and  Eliza  Martin  (Dennie)  Tracy,  and 
had  Helen,  b  Dec  3,  1873,  d  1877;  Frederick  Tracy,  b  Sep  28,  1875,  Har- 
vard 1898;  Gardiner  Greene,  b  Apl  19,  1878;  and  Gertrude,  b  Feb  1, 
1880). 

GARDINER  GREENE  HUBBARD  (descended  from  William 
Hubbard  of  Ipswich,  Mass.),  eldest  son  of  Samuel  and  Mary  Ann 
(Greene)  Hubbard,  was  born  Aug  25,  1822,  at  Sweet  Auburn  (now  Mt. 
Auburn),  Cambridge,  Mass.,  where  his  father  was  spending  the  sum- 
mer. He  graduated  at  Dartmouth  College  in  1841,  and  received  the 
degree  of  LL.  D.  from  Columbian  University,  Washington,  D.  C,  in 
1888,  and  from  Dartmouth  College,  N.  H.,  in  1894.  He  was  also  made 
Regent  of  the  Smithsonian  Institute  in  1894.  Choosing  the  law  he 
studied  it  and  practiced  the  profession  in  Boston,  in  December,  1842,  as 
partner  of  Benjamin  R.  Curtis,  subsequently  Justice  of  the  Supreme 
Court  of  the  United  States,  and  continued  in  the  profession  until  1869. 
He  also  interested  himself  in  prominent  business  enterprises;  among 
others,  the  starting  of  the  street  railroad  from  Cambridge  to  Boston,  the 
first  road  of  that  kind  ever  built  outside  of  the  city  of  New  York;  also 
the  Cambridge  Water  Works  and  Gas  Light  Companies.  Of  these  com- 
panies he  was  president  for  many  years.  He  was  also  a  member  of  the 
Massachusetts  State  Board  of  Education  for  eight  years,  in  which  cause 
he  has  also  been  prominent. 


HON.    SAMUEL    HUBBARD,    LL.D., 

of  Boston,  Mass. 
(Descended  from  William  Hubbard  of  Ipswich,  Mass 


HON.   GARDINER  GREENE  HUBBARD,   LL.D., 
of  Washington,  D.  C. 

(Descended  from  WillianvHubbard  of  Ipswich,  Mass.) 
33S 


PROMINENT  AMERICAN  HUBBARDS  ™ 

That  which  Mr.  HUBBARD  regards  as  the  best  work  of  his  life  is 
the  establishment  of  the  first  school  for  the  deaf  in  this  country  at  Chelms- 
ford, Mass.,  in  1866,  where  instead  of  signs  the  children  were  taught 
speech  and  lip  reading.  This  little  school  was  very  successful,  and  after 
repeated  appeals  to  the  legislature  of  Massachusetts  (in  which  he  was 
opposed  by  the  teachers  of  the  sign  system  then  in  use),  a  charter  was 
obtained  by  which  the  Clarke  Institution  of  Northampton,  Mass.,  was 
organized  and  the  little  school  at  Chelmsford  transferred  to  it.  Mr. 
HUBBARD  has  been  connected  with  this  school  either  as  president  or 
director  since  its  organization.  It  is  now  one  of  the  foremost  schools  in 
the  world,  and  has  completely  changed  the  method  of  instruction  of  the 
deaf  in  this  country. 

He  was  commissioner  to  the  Centennial  Exposition  in  1876,  and  the 
same  year  he  was  appointed  by  President  Grant  Chairman  of  the  United 
States  Commission  to  investigate  and  determine  the  proper  rates  to 
be  paid  by  the  Post  Office  Department  for  the  transportation  of  the 
mail;  but  his  last  work  has  been  the  bringing  to  successful  culmination, 
through  numberless  obstacles  and  public  skepticism,  the  now  well 
known  Bell  Telephone  system,  invented  by  his  son-in-law,  Prof.  Alex- 
ander Graham  Bell,  and  brought  to  successful  realization  by  his  capital 
and  executive  ability. 

Mr.  HUBBARD  is  President  of  the  National  Geographic  Society,  in 
which  he  takes  a  lively  interest;  a  trustee  of  the  Columbian  University, 
First  Vice  President  of  the  American  Association  of  Manufacturers  and 
Inventors,  and  President  of  the  Board  of  Trustees  of  the  Church  of  the 
Covenant  of  Washington,  D.  C,  and  Director  in  various  Telephone  and 
other  corporations.  Mr.  HUBBARD  is  foremost  among  Americans  in 
advancing  the  interests  of  science.  His  position  as  President  of  the 
Geographic  Society  is  his  while  he  chooses  to  retain  it.  As  the  foster 
father  of  the  telephone  system  his  is  the  praise.  The  litterateur,  and 
all  men  of  cult  and  enterprise  are  welcomed  at  his  home.  His  fine 
library  in  Washington  is  always  accessible  to  the  worthy  student.  His 
hospitality  is  unbounded  and  equally  extended  to  his  friends  by 
Mrs.  Hubbard,  who  aids  him  in  many  good  works  and  beneficent  move- 
ments. His  ancestry  includes  a  long  list  of  early  colonial  representa- 
tives, and  being  so  distinguished  in  their  varied  spheres,  it  has  seemed 
fitting  to  briefly  outline  these  relations. 

Mr.  HUBBARD  is  ninth  in  descent  from  William  Hubbard  of 
Ipswich;  eighth  in  descent  from  his  son,  Rev.  William  Hubbard  of 
Ipswich;  ninth  in  descent  from  Rev.  Nathaniel  Rogers,  Pastor  of  the 
Congregation  at  Ipswich  1638-55,  whose  father,  John  Rogers,  was  Pres- 
ident of  Harvard  College;  eighth  in   descent  from  Sir  John  Leverett, 


34o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

delegate  to  the  General  Court  of  Massachusetts  1651-53,  1663-64,  mem- 
ber of  the  Governor's  Council  1665-71,  Major  General  of  Provincial 
Forces  1663-73,  Deputy  Governor  of  Massachusetts  1671-73,  Governor 
of  Massachusetts  1673-76  during  Philip's  War,  and  knighted  by  Charles 
II.  for  services  in  that  period;  ninth  in  descent  from  John  Haynes, 
third  Governor  of  Massachusetts  Bay  Colony,  first  Governor  of  Con- 
necticut, commissioner  of  the  United  Colonies  of  New  England  for 
defense  against  the  Indians  in  1643,  and  Colonel  of  the  Connecticut 
forces  in  the  Pequot  war  of  1636;  eighth  in  descent  from  Richard  Rus- 
sell, member  of  the  General  Court  of  Massachusetts  and  Speaker 
1658-9,  1654,  1656,  1658,  assistant  and  member  of  the  Governor's  Council 
1659-74,  and  Treasurer  of  Massachusetts  1644-74;  ninth  in  descent  from 
George  Wyllys,  assistant  and  member  of  the  Governor's  Council  of  Con- 
necticut 1639-40,  Deputy  Governor  1641,  and  Governor  in  1642;  eighth  in 
descent  from  Samuel  Wyllys,  assistant  and  member  of  the  Governor's 
Council  of  Connecticut  1654-85,  and  Commissioner  to  the  Congress  of 
the  United  Colonies  1661-62,  64,  67;  fifth  in  descent  from  Jean  Paul 
Mascarene,  b.  1684,  of  a  Huguenot  family  in  France,  who  entered  the 
English  army  as  a  lieutenant  and  came  with  it  to  Nova  Scotia;  he  was 
a  member  of  the  Council  in  1720  and  associated  with  the  Governors  of 
New  Hampshire  and  Massachusetts  in  negotiating  the  treaty  of  1725 
with  the  Eastern  Indians,  Acting  Governor  of  Nova  Scotia  1740-9, 
Major  General  in  1788,  and  died  in  Boston  in  May,  1760. 

As  a  matter  of  a  little  curious  interest,  herewith  is  also  given  his 
descent  line  through  various  male  and  female  ancestors  from  King  Ed- 
ward I.,  eldest  son  of  King  Henry  III.,  House  of  Plantagenet,  Eng- 
land, tempo  1272,  down  to  himself,  making  him  of  the  twenty-third  gen- 
eration: 

(1)  King  EDWARD  I— House  of  Plantagenet: 

(2)  Joan  Plantagenet  (Joan  of  Acres)  in  Gilbert  de  Clare; 

(3)  Margaret  de  Clare  m  Hugh  de  Audley; 

(4)  Margaret  de  Audley  m  Ralf  Stafford,  1st  Earl  of  Stafford  and  Steward  of  Guscony; 

(5)  Hugh  Stafford,  2d  Earl  of  Stafford,  tn  Phillipa  Beauehamp; 

(6)  Margaret  Stafford  m  Ralf  de  Neville,  Earl  of  Westmoreland; 

(7)  Philippa  Neville  m  Thomas  D'Acre; 

(8)  Thomas  D'Acre  m  Eliza  Bones; 

(9)  Joan  D'Acre  m  Sir  Richard  Fienes; 

(10)  Sir  Thomas  Fienes  m  Alice  Fitz  Hugh; 

(11)  Thomas  Fienes,  Lord  D'Acre  of  the  South,  m  Anne  Bouchier; 

(12)  Catherine  Fienes  m  Richard  Londenoys; 

(13)  Mary  Londenoys  m  Thomas  Ilarlakenden; 

(14)  Roger  Ilarlakenden  m  Elizabeth  Harders; 

(15)  Richard  Harlakenden  m  Margaret  Hobart  (also  spelled  Hubbard); 

(16)  Mabel  Harlakenden  m  Governor  John  Haynes  of  Connecticut; 

(17)  Ruth  Havnes  m  Samuel  Wyllis; 
(18J  Mehitable  Wyllis  m  Daniel  Russell; 

(19)  Mabel  Russell  m  John  Hubbard; 

(20)  John  Hubbard  m  Martha  Coit; 

(21)  William  Hubbard  m  Joanna  Perkins; 

(22)  Hon  Samuel  Hubbard  m  Mary  Anne  Greene; 

(23)  Hon  Gardiner  Greene  Hubbard  m  Gertrude  M.  McCurdy. 


PROMINENT  AMERICAN  HUBBARDS.  54j 

Mr.  HUBBARD  married,  October  21,  1846,  Gertrude  M.  McCurdy  of 
New  York,  b  there  March  12,  1827,  daughter  of  Robert  H.  McCurdy. 
Children — Robert  McCurdy  (b  in  Boston  Dec  9,  1847,  d  Oct  n,  1849), 
Gertrude  McCurdy  (b  in  Boston  Oct  1,  1S49,  d  at  1328  Connecticut 
Avenue,  Washington,  Nov  13,  1SS6,  m  Jan  17,  1880,  at  1417  K  Street, 
Washington,  Maurice  V.  Grossmann,  b  in  Hungary,  d  in  Cambridge, 
Mass.,  Nov  10,  1S84,  and  had  Gertrude  Jll,  b  Apl  23,  1882),  Mabel 
Gardiner  (b  in  Cambridge,  Mass.,  Nov  25,  1857,  m  July  n,  1877,111 
Cambridge,  Mass.,  Alexander  Graham  Bell,  b  in  Edinburgh,  Scotland, 
March  3,  1847,  of  "  Bell  Telephone  "  fame,  and  had  Elsie  May,  b  May 
8,  1878,  in  London;  Marian  Hubbard,  b  in  Washington,  D.  C,  Feb  15, 
1880;  Edward,  b  and  d  in  1881,  and  Robert,  b  and  d  in  1883),  Roberta 
Wolcott  (b  in  Cambridge,  Mass.,  June  4,  1859,  d  July  4,  1885,  m  at  the 
British  Legation,  at  Rome,  Italy,  in  Ma}',  1881,  Charles  James  Bell, 
b  Apl  12,  1858,  in  Dublin,  Ireland,  now  of  Washington,  D.  C,  and 
had   Helen   Aideue,  b    at   132S   Connecticut  Avenue,   Washington,    D. 

C,  Mch  6,  1882;  and  Grace,  b  in  Washington,  D.  C,  Nov  3,  1884), 
Grace  Blatchford  (b  in  Cambridge,  Mass.,  Oct  8,  186 1,  m  in  New- 
York  Apl  23,  1887,  Charles  James  Bell,  her  brother-in-law,  and  had 
Gardiner  Hubbard,  b  at  Twin  Oaks,  Woodley  Lane,  West  Washington, 

D.  C,  May  8,  1890;  Charles  James,  b  in  1891,  d  in  1S92;  and  Robert 
Wolcott,  b  at  Twin  Oaks  June  4,  1S94),  and  Marian  (b  in  Cambridge, 
Mass.,  in  Apl,  1867,  d  in  Aug,  1869). 

NEHEMIAH  HUBBARD  (descended  from  George  Hubbard  of 
Middletown,  Ct.),  third  child  of  the  thirteen  children  of  Nehemiah  and 
Sarah  (Sill)  Hubbard,  was  born  April  10,  1752,  in  Middletown,  Ct.  He 
married  Cornelia  Willis  in  1777,  who  died  November  28,  1781.  He  then 
married  Lucy  Starr  February  12,  1785,  and  at  her  death  married  April 
22,  1823,  widow  Hannah  (Burnham)  Latimer.  At  fourteen  he  entered 
the  store  of  Matthew  Talcott  and  continued  there  until  twenty-one, 
when  he  embarked  for  the  West  Indies,  first  as  supercargo  and  then  as 
captain  and  merchant.  In  1776  Governor  Trumbull  appointed  him  pay- 
master of  Colonel  Burrill's  (Connecticut)  regiment.  In  May,  1777, 
General  Greene  appointed  him  Deputy  Quartermaster-General  for 
Connecticut.  He  was  present  at  the  siege  of  Yorktown  at  the  surrender 
of  Cornwallis.  As  a  provider  of  army  supplies  none  ever  excelled  him 
in  fertile  resources,  promptness,  decision  and  executive  ability.  At 
many  a  critical  juncture  the  supplies  from  Connecticut  came  to  hand 
most  opportunely  through  his  masterly  energy  and  relieved  the  starved 
fighting  patriots.  He  possessed  the  warm  confidence  of  Generals 
Washington  and  Greene,  Governor  Jonathan  Trumbull,  and  Alexander 
Hamilton.     (See  portrait  under  Revolutionary  War  Hubbards.) 


342 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


The  subjoined  original  letters*  addressed  to  him  have  recently  come 
to  light  and  are  introduced  here  as  subjects  of  interest,  bearing  as  they 
do  some  of  the  famous  signatures  of  foremost  Americans.  His  own 
handwriting  is  of  considerable  historic  value.  They  are  literal  trans- 
criptions: 

Head  Quarters,  15th  October,  1778. 
Sir:  You  are  immediately  on  receipt  of  this,  to  use  every  exertion  in  your  power  to  furnish  Mr. 
(?Meason)  the  Clothier  with  an  ample  supply  of  teams  and  carriages  for  bringing  on  the  new  clothing 
to  camp  with  the  utmost  dispatch. 

I  am,  Sir,  Your  most  obed.  servt. 


a 


The  Quarter  Master  at  Hartford. 


V^£f« 


Morristown,  [N.  J.]  Decern.  16th,  [17] 79. 
Sir:  Mr.  Olney  wrote  you  a  day  or  two  since  to  send  for  the  use  of  my  family,  if  to  he  purchased 
some  Sugar  and  other  Articles.    If  you  can  send  me  a  quarter  cask  of  wine,  either  of  Port  or  Madei  ia 
it  will  oblige  me,  as  Mrs.  Greene  has  none  to  drink,  and  expects  to  be  sick  in  a  short  time.    I  have 
only  time  to  add  that  I  am,  with  esteem, 

Your  friend, 


Mr.  Hubbard. 


[Major-Geueral  Nathaniel  Green]. 


Lebanon,  12th  Jany,  1779. 
Sir:  Be  so  good  as  to  inform  me  if  you  can  furnish  me  a  Horse  from  the  Public  Stables  for  Car- 
riage of  my  baggage  to  Philadelphia.    He  must  be  a  stout,  strong,  well-fleshed  fellow. 

I  am  not  certain  how  soon  I  shall  need  him.    Suppose  my  Receipt  to  deliver  him  to  the  Public  in 
Phila  will  be  sufficient. 

Please  send  me  word  by  my  Brother  what  I  may  depend  on. 
I  am,  sir,  Your  most  humble  servt, 


Nehemiah  Hubbard,  Hartford. 


<£e/ 


Philadelphia,  May  3,  1792. 
Sir:  I  beared  with  much  regret,  though  under  the  appearances  which  must  have  struck  you,  not 
with  much  surprise,  of  your  determination  to  decline  the  appointment  of  Superintendent  of  the 
Manufacturing  Society.  This  institution  has  presented  itself  to  my  mind  as  of  such  real  public  import- 
ance, that  I  feel  myself  much  interested  in  its  success;  and  I  acknowledge  that  I  continue  to  enter- 
tain a  conviction  of  the  practicabilty  of  ensuring  that  success  by  judicious  management.  To  this  end 
a  fit  person  as  Superintendent  is  undoubtedly  an  essential  mean.  And  my  repeated  reflections  have 
proved  to  me  that  it  is  far  from  easy  to  find  a  choice  of  proper  characters.  Hence  I  feel  a  peculiar 
anxiety  that  you  should  reconsider  your  resolution  and  still  consent  to  undertake  the  business. 


*  Originals  now  in  possession  of  William  Edward  Hulbert  (descendant  of  Thomas  Hulburt,  Say- 
brooke  and  Wethersfield,  Ct.,  1635-39),  Cromwell,  Ct. 


PROMINENT  AMERICAN  HU BEARDS. 


'  i  ■ 


j+o 


Those  characters  in  the  Direction,  who  were  too  much  invelopped  in  Speculation  to  pay  proper 
attention  to  the  truth,  will  henceforth  be  out  of  the  question,  and  I  entertain  no  doubt  that  the  next 
Election  will  supply  their  places  in  a  manner  which  will  inspire  confidence.  I  am  allso  persuaded 
that  the  Superintendent,  if  a  competent  and  trust  worthy  person,  will  be  cloathed  with  such  a  portion 
of  discretionary  authority  as  will  enable  him  to  fulfill  the  objects  of  the  Society.  To  this  I  may  add 
that  subordinate  characters  to  be  placed  at  the  head  of  the  several  branches  (I  mean  of  the  Cotton 
Manufactory)  of  whose  competency  there  is  satisfactory  evidence,  are  actually  engaged,  and  that  a 
considerable  progress  has  been  made  in  preparation. 

The  Society  meet  on  the  15th  instant.  It  is  my  intention  to  meet  them,  and  I  feel  a  confidence 
that  I  shall  be  able  to  give  just  [?such]  a  direction  to  their  measures  as  will  recover  the  ground  that 
has  been  lost  by  delay  and  indecision.  If  I  can  by  that  time  announce  that  you  are  willing  to  join  the 
Company,  it  will  give  me  particular  satisfaction. 

I  will  however  observe  that  in  such  case  it  is  of  moment  you  should  be  able  to  enter  promptly  on 
the  business.  The  spot  must  be  fixed  upon  and  the  buildings  commenced.  Let  me,  I  pray  you,  pre- 
vious to  that  time  hear  from  you  on  the  subject. 

I  am  aware  that  the  step  proposed  to  you  is  of  consequence.  I  will  only  add  that  if  the  event 
shall  not  answer  expectation,  I  should  feel  myself  bound  to  endeavor  to  render  it  not  injurious  to  you 
by  any  source  which  might  be  in  my  power. 

I  am,  with  assurances,  Your  Obed  Servant, 


[NEHEMIAH   HUBBARD'S  STATEMENT  OP  HIS  SERVICES— NOT  DATED.] 

"  The  following  is  a  Narration  embodying  the  Services  of  Nehem.  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  County 
of  Middlesex,  State  of  Conn.,  in  the  service  of  the  United  States,  which  are  as  follows,  viz.:  That  in 
May,  1776.  he  was  appointed  by  Governor  Trumbull  a  paymaster  to  a  Regiment  of  Connecticut  Troops 
Commanded  by  Colo.  Burrell,  Lieut.  Colo  Buell,  and  Major  Sedgwick,  as  field  officer,  &  was  ordered 
to  Ticonderoga:  That  on  my  arrival  at  Albany  (I  had  an  order  from  Genl.  Schuyler)  I  was  employed 
by  Jona.  Trumbull,  Esq.,  Paymaster  of  the  Northern  Department. 

"  By  order  of  Genl.  Schuyler,  then  at  Albany,  I  was  ordered  to  take  a  sum  of  money  and  proceed 
to  the  westward  for  the  payment  of  the  Troops  stationed  at  various  Posts  on  the  Mohawk  Kiver,  Colo. 
Dayton's  Regiment  being  at  Fort  Stanwix.  Having  compleated  that  Service,  I  returned  to  Albany,  & 
from  thence  Proceeded  to  Ticonderoga  and  joined  the  regiment  of  Colo.  Burrell  on  Mount  Independ- 
ence, where  I  remained  till  some  time  in  Jany,  when  I  returned  to  Hartford  and  for  some  time  served 
under  Jeremh.  Wadsworth,  Esq.,  Commd.  Genl;  that  in  May,  1777,  I  was  appointed  by  Major  Genl 
Green,  the  Quarter  Mr.  Genl  of  the  Army  of  the  United  States,  his  Deputy  for  the  State  of  Connec- 
ticut; that  I  served  in  that  capacity  untill  the  resignation  of  Genl  Green;  after  which  I  was  again 
appointed  by  Colo.  Pickering,  then  acting  as  Quarter  Master  Genl.  I  declined  to  accept  of  the  ap- 
pointment by  Colo.  Pickering,  having  it  in  my  Power  to  do  much  better  for  myself  in  other  business. 
I  nevertheless  continued  in  the  business  untill  I  was  relieved  by  the  appointment  of  a  person  to  take 
my  Place,  when  I  quit  the  service  of  the  United  States.  My  Accounts  at  the  Treasury  department, 
together  with  the  letters  herewith  annexed,  will  be  sufficient  to  substantiate  the  foregoing  state- 
ments. For  which  services  I  have  a  just  claim  on  the  United  States  for  compensation;  and  my  ac- 
counts will  prove  that  my  services  were  more  than  some  others  of  the  Deputies  of  other  States;  and 
as  I  am  nearly  eighty  years  of  age,  a  compensation  for  part  services  will  be  accepted." 


Z^L^T^r^y 


i^Ji^a^-^) 


After  the  war  he  resumed  the  occupation  of  merchant,  and  from  1808 
until  1822  was  President  of  the  Middletown  Savings  Bank,  also  a  justice 
of  the  peace  and  city  treasurer  of  Middletown.  The  land  upon  which 
now  stand  the  Wesleyan  College  Buildings  was  freely  donated  by  him 


,„„  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

as  an  evidence  of  his  public  spirit.  In  Trumbull  County,  Ohio,  he 
owned  vast  tracts  of  land,  and  Hubbard,  Ohio,  was  named  after  him. 
He  was  of  fine  stature,  erect,  of  frank  deportment,  accurate  judgment, 
and  keen  discrimination.  He  was  very  liberal,  and  the  tried  and  true 
friend  of  the  struggling  young  man  striving  for  a  competency  through 
rectitude  of  conduct  His  church  work  was  earnest  and  of  inspiring 
influence.  He  died  Feb  6,  1837,  one  of  Middletown's  most  exemplary 
citizens,  and  is  now  enjoying  the  fruits  that  a  well  spent  earthly  life 
entitles  one  to  in  the  upper  world.  The  inventory  of  his  estate 
amounted  to  $79,374.34,  a  large  fortune  in  those  days.  Children  (by 
Cornelia  Willis)— Sarah  (m  Nov,  1798,  (1)  Depue  Rosekranz  (d  Jan, 
1807)  and  had  Cornelia  Willis  and  Caroline  Maria,  and  m  Feb  15,  1808, 
(2)  Enoch  Parsons  and  had  Henry).  Children  (by  Lucy  Starr)— 
Thomas  (b  Feb.  4, 1786,  m  July,  1808,  (1)  Frances  Tabor— b  May  13, 1786, 
d  Jan  30, 1 81 8— and  had  Samuel  Tabor,  Thomas  Robinson,  NcJicmiah  and 
Richard  William.  (See  "  Prominent  American  Hubbards.")  Thomas 
then  m  Mch  29, 1819,  (2)  Eliza  Tabor— b  Aug  19, 1 781— and  had  Frances 
Eliza,  John  Tabor  and  William  Leffiugzvell);  Cornelia  (b  May  15,  1788, 
d  July  14,  1822),  Lucy  (b  Jan  1,  1795,  d  Apl  23,  1823),  and  Richard  (b 
Mch  27,  1792,  Prest.  Middlesex  Mutual  Assurance  Company,  elected 
mayor  Middletown  in  1838,  d  Sep  1,  1839,  Yale  1813,  m  Sep  7,  1814, 
Polly  Cone— b  Feb  27,  1793,  d  1850  in  Ashtabula,  O.,  dau  Salmon  and 
Polly  (Pinneo)  Cone  of  Colchester,  Ct  —  and  had  Lucy  Mary,  b  Apl  5, 
1817,  d  Nov  3,  1823;  Edzcard,  b  Aug  20,  1820,  d  y;  Edward  Cone,  b  Sep 
27,  1824,  m  Sarah  Humphreys  b  June  5,  1830,  dau  William  and  Maria 
Humphreys,  and  had  six  children;  and  Trances  Cone. 

AMBITIOUS   NOMENCLATURE. 

"  Give  me  my  Romeo  :  and,  when  he  shall  die, 
Take  him,  and  cut  him  out  in  little  stars.    *    * 

Romeo  and  Juliet,  Act  III.— Shakespeare. 

Besides  the  regulation  lot  of  ordinary,  queer,  and  odd,  Scripture  and 
ancient  given  names  which  will  appear  in  the  index,  there  are  a  few 
living  Hubbards  on  the  publisher's  lists  (of  whom  no  particulars  appear, 
through  no  fault  of  this  office)  whose  names  are  historic,  histrionic  and 
otherwise  famous.  Romeo  lives  in  New  Jersey,  while  Juliet  sojourns 
in  the  West,  near  to  Ophelia,  whose  home  is  in  Nebraska.  Alabama 
holds  firmly  to  Diana,  Michigan  is  safe  with  Leonidas  in  its  borders. 
Georgia  rejoices  in  Virgil,  Massachusetts  in  Darius,  while  New  York  is 
doubly  happy  with  Homer  and  Orlando. 


GOVERNOR    HENRY    HUBBARD 
of  Charlesto-wn,  X.  H. 

(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford,  Ct.) 


345 


A 
346 


LINE    OF    MARYLAND    HUBBARDS. 

(Descended  from  Adley  Hubbard  of  Maryland.) 


LINE  OF 


Maryland 


Land  of  my  Sires  !   What  mortal  hand 

Can  e'er  untie  the  filial  ba«d 

That  knits  me  to  thy  rugged  strand — Sir  Walter  Scott. 


ADLEY  HUBBARD,  like  all  of  the  name  who  came  to  America, 
was  an  Englishman.  His  ancestry  in  England  has  never  been 
traced.  When  he  arrived,  which  was  in  1660,  he  settled  in  Maryland.  It 
is  recorded  that  after  18  years  his  sister  "  Bridget "  joined  him  in 
America.  He  was  a  Quaker,  as  were  his  descendants.  A  large  pro- 
portion of  Hubbards  through  the  States  of  Maryland,  Virginia  and 
North  Carolina  were  Quakers  about  this  period  and  later.  It  is  yet 
undiscovered  who  his  wife  was  and  how  many  children  they  had.  One 
son,  however,  was  named — 

RICHARD  HUBBARD,  who  was  called  "  Captain."  He  bought 
land  of  one  John  Ward.  The  deed  of  conveyance  was  made  out  at  Sas- 
safras River,  Cecil  County,  Maryland,  and  bears  date  of  April  7,  1705. 
Among  his  children  was  a  son  named — 

CHARLES  HUBBARD,  who  removed  to  Dorchester  County,  Mary- 
land, and  took  out  a  patent  for  a  tract  of  land  in  1724.  This  was  known 
as  "  Hubbard's  Addition."     He  had  a  son  named— 

SOLOMON  HUBBARD,  who  was  born  in  Dorchester  County,  and 
who,  in  the  year  1765,  secured  a  patent  for  a  tract  of  land  in  this  county, 
which  was  called  "Hubbard's  Desire."    SOLOMON  had  a  son  named— 

JESSE  HUBBARD,  who  was  born  in  1742  and  died  in  1815.  He 
was  a  planter  and  lived  in  Caroline  County,  Maryland.  (There  was  a 
Jesse  Hubbard  in  the  "State  Navy"  of  Virginia  during  the  war  of  the 
Revolution  and  he  may  have  been  the  person  mentioned.)  He  left  six 
children— Peter,  J1  Edward  (see  following),  Jesse,  Rebecca,  John  and 

NlCIA. 

347 


348  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

p  EDWARD  HUBBARD  was  born  in  1765  and  died  in  1832.  He 
was  a  planter  and  inherited  his  father's  plantation,  which  was  situated 
near  Denton,  Caroline  County,  where  he  lived  until  his  death.  Until 
this  period  EDWARD  and  his  ancestors  were  all  Quakers.  He  left 
eight  children — Newton,  Celia,  "p  Lemuel,  Sarah,  Eliza,  Mary, 
Wright,  and  Jesse  who  had  a  son  Alva. 

J2  LEMUEL  HUBBARD,  third  child  of  Edward  Hubbard,  was 
born  June  2,  1799.  His  occupation  was  that  of  a  planter.  He  resided 
near  Preston,  Caroline  County,  Md.  In  the  year  1823  he  married  Mary 
Rumbold,  daughter  of  Judge  John  Rurabold  of  the  same  County  and 
State.  They  lived  to  celebrate  the  50th  anniversary  of  their  wedding 
he  dying  eight  years  later,  on  August  23d,  1881. 

LEMUEL  HUBBARD  was  a  consistent  member  of  the  Methodist 
Episcopal  Church  for  upwards  of  fifty  years.  His  widow,  at  this 
writing,  is  still  living,  having  attained  the  advanced  age  of  88  years. 
She  is  a  most  remarkable  and  most  estimable  old  lady,  whose  compan- 
ionship is  sought  by  old  and  young.  Her  health  is  excellent  and  she 
is  in  full  possession  of  all  her  faculties.  She  reads  and  writes  without 
the  aid  of  spectacles.  Children — Eliza  Jane  (b  Jan  17,  1827,  m  Jan  31, 
1844,  William  Pritchett,  who  d  in  187 1),  John  Edward  (b  Mch  16,  1829, 
m  Jan  5,  1868,  Emma  Wainwright),  "f3  Thomas  Rumbold  (see  follow- 
ing), Elizabeth  Anne  (b  Oct  3,  1833,  m  Jan  13,  1857,  Capt.  Peter  N. 
Collins),  Mary  Lucinda,  (b  June  8,  1836,  m  Feb  23,  1854,  William  E. 
Todd),  James  Henry  (b  Jan  13,  1838,  m  Dec  23,  1862,  Kate  Turner,  d 
Nov  27,  1865),  U1  William  Lemuel  (see  elsewhere),  Sarah  Elmer  (b 
Oct  17,  1843,  m  Feb  9,  1864,  Frank  A.  Willis),  Zebdial  Potter  (b  June 
2,  1847,  m  Jan  9,  1878,  Nettie  Parks)  and  Matthew  Patton  (b  May  23, 
1849,  m  1879,  Mollie  Parks). 

T3  THOMAS  RUMBOLD  HUBBARD,  third  child  of  Lemuel  and 
Mary  (Rumbold)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Caroline  County,  Maryland, 
June  28,  1851.  He  lived  at  the  parental  homestead  until  his  21st  year, 
when  he  entered  into  the  mercantile  business,  which  he  pursued  until 
1875.  He  then  with  his  brothers,  John  Edward  and  William  Lemuel, 
commenced  the  manufacture  of  super-phosphates  at  Chestertown,  Md., 
under  the  firm  name  of  Hubbard  Brothers,  being  the  pioneer  manu- 
facturers of  fertilizers  on  the  Eastern  shore  of  Maryland.  In  1878,  the 
firm  being  dissolved  by  mutual  consent,  he  associated  his  son,  Wilbur 
Watson  Hubbard,  with  him  in  the  business,  which  to  the  present  time 
has  been  conducted  under  the  firm  name  of  T.  R.  Hubbard  &  Son.  He 
married,  Nov  29,  1859,  Josephine  Mason  Watson,  daughter  of  George  W. 
and  Mary  Watson  of  Milford,  Del.  Children — J4  Wilbur  Watson  (see 
following),  and  Anna  (b  Apl  22,  1862,  m  Sep  20,  1892,  Rowland  Watts, 


A   LINE   OF  MARYLAND  HUB  BARDS.  349 

A.  M.,  Professor  of  Mathematics  in  Western  Maryland  College,  West- 
minster, Md.). 

T4  WILBUR  WATSON  HUBBARD,  only  son  of  Thomas  Rumbold 
and  Josephine  Mason  (Watson)  Hubbard,  was  born  Sep  19,  i860,  at 
Greensborough,  Caroline  County,  Md.,  and  was  educated  at  private 
schools,  and  completed  his  education  at  Washington  College,  Chester- 
town,  Md.  At  the  age  of  18  years  he  entered  into  business  with  his 
father  in  the  manufacture  of  fertilizers.  His  keen  business  push  has 
contributed  largely  to  building  up  an  extensive  trade  in  Maryland  and 
adjoining  States.  In  1890  he  was  largely  instrumental  in  organizing 
the  Second  National  Bank  of  Chestertown,  Md.,  and  of  which  institution 
he  has  been  one  of  the  most  active  directors  since  its  foundation.  He 
married  November  20,  1890,  Etta  Belle  Ross,  daughter  of  Judge  James 
E.  and  Miriam  (Warren)  Ross  of  Mexico,  Mo.  Children — Miriam 
Warren  (b  Sep  20,  1891),  and  Thomas  Ross  (b  Dec  30,  1894). 

U1  WILLIAM  LEMUEL  HUBBARD,  seventh  child  of  Lemuel  and 
Mary  (Rumbold)  Hubbard,  was  born  Apl  18,  1841,  on  the  plantation  of 
his  father,  near  Preston,  Caroline  County,  Md.,  where  he  remained  until 
he  attained  his  majority,  during  which  time  he  attended  one  of  the 
public  schools  of  the  county.  He  went  East  at  the  age  of  21,  making 
his  home  in  Portland,  Maine,  where  he  remained  until  the  close  of  the 
Civil  War  in  1865,  when  he  returned  to  Maryland.  He  was  then  mar- 
ried at  the  age  of  24  to  Sarah  Lavenia  Wiley,  daughter  of  Levin  Wiley, 
Esq.,  of  Federalsburg,  Caroline  County,  Md.  At  this  age  he  entered 
the  mercantile  business  in  the  State  of  Delaware,  which  was  continued 
six  years.  In  the  year  1872  he  formulated  plans  to  engage  in  the  man- 
ufacture of  fertilizers,  which  was  commenced  on  a  small  scale,  associating 
his  brother,  John  Edward,  with  him  as  a  partner,  and  trading  under  the 
firm  name  of  Hubbard  &  Brother,  at  Easton,  Md.  In  the  year  1886  his 
brother  retired.  He  then  established  his  business  in  Baltimore  City  at 
No.  10  Light  Street,  under  the  firm  name  of  Hubbard  &  Company. 

This  firm's  business  has  assumed  large  proportions,  and  is  now 
regarded  as  one  of  the  staunchest  enterprises  in  Baltimore  City.  Mr. 
HUBBARD  is  the  senior  member  of  this  firm  and  one  of  the  pioneers 
of  the  fertilizer  business  in  this  country.  He  is  regarded  as  valuable 
authority  upon  the  subject  of  chemical  manures.  He  makes  his  home  in 
Easton,  Talbot  County,  Md.,  where  he  has  other  large  business  interests. 
Mr.  Hubbard  has  followed  in  the  footsteps  of  his  father  in  his 
Church  views,  and  his  entire  household  are  strict  adherents  to  the  Doc- 
trines of  the  Methodist  Episcopal  Church.  Children— Julia  A.  (b 
August  2,  1866,  d  Nov  22,  1869),  J.  Harry  (b  Oct  11,  1868,  d  Apl  6, 
1890),  T.  May  (b  Oct  20,  1870,  m  June  6,  1894,  Dr.  Joseph  Shermer  Gar- 


l5o 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 


rison),  [J2  Howard  (see  following),  Grace  W.  (b  Sep  28,  1884),  and 
William  Lemuel  (b  Feb  15,  1888). 

U2  HOWARD  HUBBARD,  fourth  child  of  William  Lemuel  and 
Sarah  Lavenia  (Wiley)  Hubbard,  was  born  January  22,  1874,  at  Wyo- 
ming, Del.  He  received  his  primary  education  at  the  schools  of 
Easton,  Md.,  and  graduated  at  Baltimore  City  College  and  Bryant  and 
Stratton's  Business  College.  In  the  year  1893  he  accepted  a  position 
with  Hubbard  &  Company  of  Baltimore  City,  of  which  firm  his  father 
is  the  senior  member. 

Mr.  HUBBARD,  though  young,  has  exhibited  marked  business 
ability  for  one  of  his  years.  His  attention  to  duty  was  rewarded  by  an 
admittance  as  a  partner  in  the  above  firm,  January  1,  1895.  He  mar- 
ried Feb  6,  1895,  F.  Louise  Broumel,  daughter  of  James  Broumel,  Esq., 
deceased,  late  of  Baltimore  City. 

T4  Mr.  WILBUR  WATSON  HUBBARD  was  one  of  the  delegates 
at  the  "  World's  Congress  of  Bankers  and  Financiers  "  which  convened 
at  the  Art  Palace,  Chicago,  June  19th,  1893. 


PUBLISHER'S  NOTE. 

When  I  was  a  baby,  of  course,  like  all  other  babies  I  was  helpless,  but 
I  was  (I  am  told)  lusty,  fat  and  made  my  existence  known  by  the 
usual  method  !  "  Such  a  baby  !"  my  parents  evidently  thought,  for  I 
was  eight  months  old  before  I  was  named.  The  gamut  of  names  was 
run  over  and  over  again,  but  without  agreement  or  decision.  Finally 
the  Rev.  E.  D.  Chapman,  pastor  of  Baptist  Church  in  Deep  River,  Ct, 
calling,  was  appealed  to  as  a  sort  of  referee.  He  coolly  took  a  memoir 
of  Harlan  Page,  the  celebrated  divine,  from  his  overcoat  pocket,  and 
calling  for  pen  and  ink,  wrote  what  has  ever  since  been  my  name.  This 
memoir  was  published  in  1835  by  the  American  Tract  Society,  in  the 
building  directly  opposite  my  present  office  window! 

It  was  an  odd  name,  in  the  nomenclature  of  the  Hubbard  tribes,  and 
I  was  surprised  some  ten  years  since  to  find  another  of  the  same  "  front " 
name  living  in  Bradford,  Pa.,  and  now  within  a  few  months  of  publica- 
tion, his  son,  with  same  name,  pops  up,  living  in  Chicago.  What  line 
they  belong  to,  or  where  to  locate  them,  I  have  been  unable  to  learn. 

H.  P.  H. 


REV.    BELA    HUBBARD,    D.    D., 
of  New  Haven,  Ct. 

From  a  Photograph  of  a  Tintype  of  an  India  Ink  Picture. 
(Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford,  Ct.) 


351 


Phineas  Hubbard,  Samuel  Brigham  Hubbard,  and  Silas  Graves  Hubbard  descended  from  George 
Hubbard  of  Guilford,  Conn.;  and  Dr.  Frank  Allen  Hubbard  from  Philip  Hubbard  of  Kittery,  Me. 

352 


Our  rural  ancestors,  with  little  blest, 

Patient  of  labor  when  the  end  was  rest, 

Indulged  the  day  that  hous'd  their  annual  grain 

With  feasts,  and  off 'rings,  and  a  thankful  strain— Alexander  Pope. 


DESCENT  LINE  OF  HENRY  SEWARD  HUBBARD, 
SANTA   MONICA,  CAL. 

JOHN  Hubbard— Rebecca  Wells,  John  Hubbard— Elizabeth  , 
Benjamin  Hubbard— Susannah  Cady,  Willard  Hubbard— Lucy  Starr, 
Willard  Hubbard— Lois  Williams,  Samuel  William  Hubbard— Mary 
Hurst  Gladding. 

HENRY  SEWARD  HUBBARD,  second  son  of  Samuel  William 
and  Mary  Hurst  (Gladding)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Providence,  R.  I., 
Dec  ii,  1854,  and  named  by  his  father  after  the  statesman,  William 
Henry  Seward.  He  attended  school  in  Providence  until  his  father  re- 
moved to  Hampton,  adjoining  Pomfret,  Ct.  He  also  attended  a  board- 
ing-school at  Schooley's  Mountain,  N.  J,  in  1871-72,  and  was  prepared 
for  college  by  a  Cornell  graduate,  but  circumstances  thwarted  this 
purpose  and  he  never  matriculated.  He  served  the  Mutual  Life  Insur- 
ance Company  for  eight  years,  or  until  a  severe  illness  severed  the  busi- 
ness connection.  In  1889  he  removed  to  California  and  was  school 
trustee  and  postmaster  at  Advance,  Tulare  County,  until  his  removed  in 
November,  1890,  to  Santa  Monica,  Cal.  In  1893  he  was  elected  District 
Secretary,  I.  O.  G.  T.,  for  the  Southern  District  of  California.  Mr. 
HUBBARD  is  prominently  identified  with  religious  works  and  issues 
a  small  paper  to  advance  Christian  interests.  Sep  13,  1883,  he  was  mar- 
ried by  Rev.  J.J.  Wooley,  to  his  cousin,  Susan  Maria  Peck.  Children— 
May  Winifred  (b  June  7,  1884),  and  Charlotte  Peck  (b  June  6,1888,  d 
August  27,  1888). 
353 


.-,  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  G  EXE  A  LOGY. 

DESCENT  LINE  OF  EDWARD  HUBBARD  SMITH, 
TOLEDO,  OHIO. 

George  Hubbard — Elizabeth  Watts,  Daniel  Hubbard — Mary  Clarke, 
Daniel  Hubbard  — Susannah  Bailey,  Daniel  Hubbard  —  Temperance 
Shaler,  Daniel  Hubbard  —  Eunice  Clark,  Moses  Hubbard — Abigail 
Titus,  Lucia  Hyde  Hubbard — Solomon  B.  Smith. 

EDWARD  HUBBARD  SMITH,  oldest  of  the  four  children  of  Solo- 
mon B.  and  Lucy  Hyde  (Hubbard)  Smith,  was  born  Feb  15,  1843,  at 
Schoharie  Court  House,  N.  Y.,  and  lived  in  Schoharie  County  until  the 
autumn  of  i860,  when  he  removed  to  Illinois,  from  which  State  he  aided 
his  country  in  the  late  civil  war  in  the  12th  111  Vol  Inf,  also  in  the  37th 
Inf,  serving  out  two  enlistments.  He  attended  Abington  College  for  a 
period  and  adopted  stenography  as  his  profession,  and  is  at  present  the 
Official  Stenographer  of  the  Courts  of  Lucas  County,  Ohio.  In  187 1  he 
married  in  La  Salle  County,  111.,  Margeret  L.  Brown,  and  had  one  child, 
Bessie  Lucia  Smith. 


DESCENT    LINE    OF    ROBERT    MORRIS    HUBBARD, 
ST.  LOUIS,  MO. 

George    Hubbard — Mary    Bishop,  John    Hubbard — Mary    Merriam 
Jonathan  Hubbard — Hannah  Rice,  Jonathan  Hubbard — Rebecca  Brown, 
Jonathan    Hubbard  —  Abigail   Jennison,  Jonathan    Hubbard— Eunice 
Wheeler,  Jennison  Hubbard — Eliza  Fitch. 

ROBERT  MORRIS  HUBBARD,  son  of  Jennison  and  Eliza  (Fitch) 
Hubbard,  was  born  in  Charlestown,  N.  H.,  Sep  21,  1830.  He  removed 
to  St.  Louis  in  1849,  and  is  engaged  there  in  the  commission  business. 
August  5,  1858,  he  married  Sarah  B.  Ross  of  that  city  (b  in  Newbury- 
port  Aug  4,  183 1,  d  Nov  20,  1879),  daii  of  Capt  John  B.  Ross  of  New- 
buryport,  Mass,  and  had  Henry  F.  (b  Sep  29,  1859,  m  June  19,  1889, 
Sarah  E.  Rowe  of  St.  Louis  and  had  Dorothy,  b  May  16,  1890)  and 
Eliza  Ross  (b  Mch  9,  1862,  m  Mch  26,  1885,  Benjamin  Brown  of  that 
city— d  Mch  10,  1890— and  had  Sarah  Ross,  b  Oct  21,  1888).  ROBERT 
MORRIS  HUBBARD  then  married  June  21,  1SS1,  Mary  Ross  Gilbert, 
of  St.  Louis.     His  father — 

JENNISON  J.  HUBBARD,  was  born  in  (?)  Charlestown,  N.  H.,  and 
was  known  as  an  enterprising,  industrious  and  prosperous  farmer  there. 
He  m  Oct  26,  1818,  Eliza  Fitch  of  Charlestown,  b  1800,  and  had  other 
children — Henry  (b  1S21,  rem  to  Stockton,  Cal),  Sarah  Delano  (b 
1823,  m  Amasa  Rice,  a  prosperous  farmer  of  Pittsfield,  Mass,  and  had 
Robert  A.  b  1850),  and  Ghoran  Fitch  (b  Aug  10,  1829,  went  West  in 
1 846). 


ABRIDGED   LI X lis    OF   DESCENT. 


155 


DESCENT  LINE  OF  CHARLES  APPLETON  HUBBARD 
NEWTON  CENTRE,  MASS. 

George  Hubbard — Mary  Bishop,  John  Hubbard — Mar}-  Mcrriam, 
Jonathan  Hubbard — Hannah  Rice,  Thomas  Hubbard — Mary  Fletcher, 
Nathan  Hubbard — Mary  Patterson,  Hezekiah  Hubbard — Rebecca 
Hutchinson,  Harry  Hubbard — Clarissa  Fay,  Appleton  Burnham  Hub- 
bard— Betsey  Louisa  Clark. 

CHARLES  APPLETON  HUBBARD,  eldest  son  of  Appleton  Burn- 
ham  and  Betsey  Louisa  (Clark)  Hubbard,  was  born  June  7,  1857,  at 
Troy,  N.  H.,  and  graduated  from  the  New  Hampshire  College  of  Agri- 
culture and  Mechanic  Arts  in  1877.  He  lived  in  Troy  until  1882,  when 
he  removed  with  his  mother  and  brother  to  Boston,  Mass.  He  was  mar- 
ried at  Rindge,  N.  H.,  October  15,  1884,  to  Maryanna  Stearns,  daughter 
of  Julius  Augustus  and  Mary  Ann  (Wood)  Stearns  of  same  place.  Mr. 
HUBBARD  is  now,  and  has  been  for  several  years,  in  the  Accounting 
Department  of  the  Union  Pacific  Railway  at  its  Boston  office,  though 
he  resides  at  Newton  Centre,  a  suburban  town  eight  miles  out  from 
Boston. 


DESCENT  LINE  OF  HENRY  SCOTT  HUBBARD, 
COFFEE,  BEDFORD  CO.,  VA. 

George  Hubbard— Mary  Bishop,  John  Hubbard— Mary  Merriam, 
Isaac  Hubbard — Ann  Warner,  John  Hubbard — Hannah  Cowles, 
John  Hubbard — Anne  Hunt,  John  Hubbard — Prudence  Stevens,  Henry 
Hubbard— Sally  Walker  Dean,  Henry  Hubbard— Louisa  Dexter  West. 

HENRY  SCOTT  HUBBARD,  eldest  of  the  six  children  of  Henry 
and  Louisa  Dexter  (West)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Charlestown,  N.  H., 
January  6,  1852,  attended  school  there,  and  came  with  his  father  to 
Bedford  Co.,  Va.,  in  1867,  where  he  follows  the  occupation  of  farming. 
His  brothers  and  sisters  are  named  Eleanor  Charity  (b  1853),  Samuel 
Hildreth  (b  1S56),  Nathalie  Dean  (b  185S),  Benjamin  West  (b  1S63)  and 
Louis  Dexter  (b  1866).  November  27,  1SS7,  he  married  Mary  Sejar 
Cronk.  Children— Henry  (b  Sep  5,  1889)  and  Eleanor  (b  Dec  1,  1892). 
The  father  of  HENRY  SCOTT  HUBBARD  was— 

HENRY  HUBBARD,  Jr.,  eldest  child  of  the  five  children  of  Gov- 
ernor Henry  (see  Prominent  American  Hubbards)  and  Sally  Walker 
(Dean)  Hubbard,  who  was  born  in  Charlestown,  N.  H.,  June  21,  1S17. 
He  graduated  from  Harvard  in  1S37  and  practiced  law  in  his  father's 
office  for  many  years,  holding  various  civil  offices,  being  also  a  member 
of  the  Governor's  staff,  with  rank  of  Colonel,  but  his  health  failing  him 
he  removed  to  Yirginia,  in  1S67,  to  get  the  benefit  of  a  milder  climate. 


356  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

DESCENT  LINE  OF  HENRY  EUGENE  HUBBARD, 
DANSVILLE,  N.  Y. 

George  Hubbard — Elizabeth  Watts,  Samuel  Hubbard — Sarah  Kirby 
Samuel  Hubbard — Martha  Peck,  Watts  Hubbard — Mary  Stanley,  Watts 
Hubbard — Lois  Corey,  Oliver  Hubbard — Elizabeth  Beckwith,  Henry 
Hubbard — Lucretia  Gates. 

HENRY  EUGENE  HUBBARD,  eldest  of  the  three  children  of 
Henry  and  Lucretia  (Gates)  Hubbard,  daughter  of  Herman  and  Susan 
(Hall)  Gates,  was  born  in  Newport,  N.  H.,  Nov  4,  1852.  He  attended 
the  public  schools  and  also  Dansville  Seminary,  N.  Y.  In  1853  his 
parents  moved  from  Newport  to  Norwich,  Chenango  County,  N.  Y.,  and 
in  1858  to  Unadilla,  Otsego  County,  thence  to  Dansville,  Livingston 
County,  N.  Y.,  in  1861,  where  Mr.  HUBBARD  still  resides  and  is  en- 
gaged in  the  manufacturing  business.  His  parents  and  a  brother  are 
living  in  Painesville,  Lake  County,  Ohio.  April  14,  1875,  he  married  Ida 
D.  Squires,  of  Dansville,  daughter  of  Byron  Titus  and  Mary  (Eggles- 
ton)  Squires.  Children — Katherine  Eggleston  (b  Oct  1,  1876),  and 
William  Arthur  (b  Aug  20,  1880). 


DESCENT   LINE   OF   JOHN    GORDON   HUBBARD, 
DRACUT,  MASS. 

George  Hubbard — Mary  Bishop,  John  Hubbard — Mary  Merriam,  Jon- 
athan Hubbard — Hannah  Rice,  Jonathan  Hubbard — Rebecca  Brown, 
John  Hubbard — Mary  Ball,  John  Hubbard — Rebecca  Preston,  Josiah 
Hubbard — Mehitable  Zipporah  Whitmore. 

JOHN  GORDON  HUBBARD,  only  son  of  Josiah  and  Mehitable  Zip- 
porah (Whitmore)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  West  Lebanon,  N.  H.,  April  6, 
1827.  His  parents  removed  to  Lowell,  Mass.,  in  1838,  where  he  was  edu- 
cated for  a  prospective  medical  career.  He  longed  for  Thespian  delights, 
however,  and  became  eventually  an  actor  and  lecturer  instead.  In  the 
Boston  Museum,  under  Moses  Kimball,  he  learned  his  rudiments,  and 
from  185 1  to  1867  toured  the  United  States  and  her  Majesty's  Domin- 
ions with  an  entertainment  known  as  "  Hubbard's  Varieties."  This  was 
a  pronounced  success  and  yielded  him  a  competency.  In  1867  he  settled 
in  Dracut,  a  suburb  of  Lowell,  Mass.,  where  he  has  been  selectman  for 
12  years,  chairman  of  the  school  board,  and  postmaster  7  years.  He 
married  June  1,  1851,  Caroline  Chase  Colby  of  Haverhill,  Mass.,  and  had 
John  Josiah  (b  Jan  26,  1854,  d  July  22,  1855).  Nov  8,  1864,  he  married 
Annie  Christine  Hasty  of  Boston,  whose  son  died  at  birth  Dec  22,  187 1, 
while  she  died  July  3,  1874.  Oct  23,  1878,  he  married  Adelaide  Louise 
Gould  of  New  York,  and  had  Josiah  Gordon  (b  July  24,  1879). 


ABRIDGED   LINES   OF  DESCENT.  357 

DESCENT    LINE  OF  ADOLPHUS  SKINNER  HUBBARD, 
SAN    FRANCISCO,  CAL. 

Edmund    Hobart   ,    Thomas    Hubbard— Anne    Ptomer,  Caleb 

Hubbard— Mrs.  Elizabeth  Faxon,  Benjamin  Hubbard— Susannah  New- 
comb,  Peter  Hubbard— Desire  Copeland,  Peter  Hubbard— Susannah 
Clark',  Theodore  Hubbard— Dorothy  Willson,  Theodore  Hubbard— 
Anne  Ward  Ballou. 

ADOLPHUS  SKINNER  HUBBARD,  fifth  child  of  Theodore  and 
Anne  Ward  (Ballou)  Hubbard,  was  born  July  7,  1838,  in  Glen  Ellyn, 
Dupage  Co.,  111.  He  married  in  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  Feb.  29,  1872, 
Sarah*  Isabe'lle  Sylvester  (b  Mch  14,  1840,  in  Charlestown,  Mass.), 
fourth  daughter  of  John  and  Hannah  Goodrich  (Holt)  Sylvester.  Mr. 
HUBBARD  has  lived  some  years  in  San  Francisco.  He  is  recognized 
as  one  of  the  original  founders  of  the  patriotic  Society  which  ultimately 
became  the  Sons  of  the  American  Revolution.  He  is  a  communicant 
of  the  Protestant  Episcopal  Church,  a  Mason,  and  the  Registrar  of  the 
California  Historical  Society.  Children— Theodore  Worthington  (b 
in  San  Francisco  Apl  18,  1874). 

DESCENT  LINE  OF  DANIEL  ROBERTS  HUBBARD, 
SOUTHINGTON,  CT. 

George  Hubbard— Elizabeth  Watts,  Daniel  Hubbard— Mary  Clark, 
Daniel  Hubbard— Susannah  Bailey,  Jeremiah  Hubbard— Alice  Shaler, 
Jeremiah  Hubbard— Flora  Hazelton,  Simon  Hubbard— Chloe  Williams, 
Jeremiah  Hubbard— Elizabeth  Roberts. 

DANIEL  ROBERTS  HUBBARD,  son  of  Jeremiah  and  Elizabeth 
(Roberts)  Hubbard,  was  born  Sept  20,  1836,  at  Cromwell,  Ct.,  received 
his  education  there,  and  entered  the  employment  of  the  J.  &  E.  Stevens 
Co.  Dec  5,  i860,  he  married  Lucetta  Mildrum  Wilcox  (d  May  12,  1876). 
The  first  call  for  troops  stirred  his  Hubbard  patriotism,  and  May  22, 
1 86 1,  found  him  commissioned  2d  Lieut  in  the  4th  Conn  Inf,  which  was 
changed  to  artillery  Jan  1,  1862,  and  commanded,  successively,  by 
Colonels  Tvler  and  Abbot.  This  regiment  stood  high  up  among  the 
effective  regiments  of  the  United  States.  Lieut.  HUBBARD'S  soldierly 
qualities  soon  won  him  a  captain's  commission.  He  participated  m  the 
Peninsular  Campaign  and  the  defenses  of  Washington,  ruining  his 
health  thereby,  and  necessitating  his  discharge  for  disability  Sept  20, 
1864  Colonel  Abbot  said  of  him,  "  You  have  been  connected  with  the 
regiment  more  than  three  years  and  have  won  the  respect  alike  of 
officers  and  men.  Your  high  sense  of  honor  and  your  faithful  perform- 
ance of  duty  have  rendered  your  influence  and  example  all  that  could 
be  desired."'    Children— Elmer  Wilcox  (see  Military  Graduates). 


o58  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

DESCENT   LINE  OF  HARRY  HUBBARD, 
NEW   YORK  CITY. 

George  Hubbard— Mary  Bishop,  John  Hubbard— Mary  Merriam, 
Jonathan  Hubbard— Hannah  Rice,  Thomas  Hubbard— Mary  Fletcher, 
Nathan  Hubbard— Mary  Patterson,  Hezekiah  Hubbard— Rebecca 
Hutchinson,  Harry  Hubbard— Clarissa  Fay,  Appleton  Burnham  Hub- 
bard— Betsey  Louisa  Clark. 

HARRY  HUBBARD,  second  and  youngest  son  of  Appleton  Burn- 
ham  Hubbard  (b  May  29, 1829,  d  Oct  29,  1862),  and  Betsey  Louisa  Clark 
(b  Sep  19,  1830,  m  Sep  19,  1S54),  was  born  in  Troy,  N.  H.,  October  19, 
1859.  When  a  young  man  he  moved  with  his  mother  and  brother  to 
Boston,  Mass.  He  graduated  from  Phillips  Exeter  Academy  in  1880 
and  from  Harvard  College  in  1884,  and  afterward  studied  law  at  the 
Harvard  Law  School.  He  was  admitted  to  the  Suffolk  Bar  in  iSSS,  and 
soon  afterward  settled  in  New  York  City  and  began  the  practice  of  law. 
He  is  now  a  member  of  the  firm  of  Dillon  &  Hubbard,  consisting  of  ex- 
Judge  John  F.  Dillon,  his  son  John  M.  Dillon  and  Mr.  HUBBARD. 
He  married  Oct  15,  1S91,  Maria  Louise  Clancy,  daughter  of  Edward 
and  Maria  Louise  (Gib-borne)  Clancy. 

DESCENT    LINE    OF    RICHARD    HENRY    SYLYESTER, 
WASHINGTON,  D.  C. 

George  Hubbard  — Mary  Bishop,  John  Hubbard— Mary  Merriam, 
Isaac  Hubbard— Anne  Warner,  John  Hubbard— Hannah  Cowles,  John 
Hubbard— Anne  Hunt,  John  Hubbard— Prudence  Stevens,  Elizabeth 
Hubbard — Henry  Hamilton  Sylvester. 

RICHARD  HENRY  SYLVESTER,  son  of  Elizabeth  Hubbard 
and  Henry  Hamilton  Sylvester,  was  born  April  17,  1831,  in  Charles- 
town,  N.  H.,  and  attended  Phillips  Exeter  Academy  for  four  years 
and  Yale  University  (Class  of  51)  for  one  year.  He  then  studied 
law  with  Edmund  L.  Cushing  (afterward  Chief  Justice  of  New  Hamp- 
shire) and  was  admitted  to  the  bar  at  Ann  Arbor,  Mich.  His  literary 
taste  was  for  the  stirring  class,  however,  and  so  prosaic  law  books  were 
closed  and  shelved  and  live  journalism  embraced  instead.  He  removed 
to  Iowa  City,  Iowa,  and  found  ample  opportunities  there  for  his  graceful 
and  forcible  pen  by  editing  the  State's  leading  paper,  then  known  as 
the  Iozva  Capital  Reporter.  With  the  exception  of  about  five  years  in 
business  at  Memphis,  Tenn.,  shortly  after  the  war,  he  has  ever  since 
been  connected  with  the  press  in  St.  Louis,  and  Washington,  D.  C.  Since 
1889  "  Dick  "  Sylvester  has  been  the  associate  editor  of  the  Washington 
Post,  the  Capital  City's  leading  journal,  and  is  widely  known  by  all 
his  fellow-scribes  in  Washington    and  elsewhere.     His   review  of  the 


ABRIDGED  LINES  OF  DESCENT.  ,-Q 

political  and  public  career  of  vSamuel  J.  Kirkwood,  the  famous  war  gov- 
ernor of  Iowa,  in  the  Washington  Post,  was  the  finest  effort  of  its  kind 
the  compiler  ever  read.  The  mother  of  Mr.  SYLVESTER,  Elizabeth 
Hubbard  (b  1792,  d  183 1)  was  the  sister  of  the  late  Gov  Henry  Hubbard 
of  New  Hampshire.  She  married  Henry  Hamilton  Sylvester  (b  in 
Leicester,  Mass.,  1792,  d  1871  at  Hartland,  Vt.),  Feb  25,  1816,  in  Charles- 
town,  X.  H.,  and  had  four  children,  of  whom  RICHARD  HENRY  was 
the  youngest,  and  the  only  one  now  living.  Mr.  SYLVESTER  married 
Martha  Woods,  daughter  of  Rev.  W.  W.  Woods,  of  the  Presbyterian 
ministry.  Children — Richard  Henry,  Jr.  (b  Aug  14,  1857,  m  Laura 
McFall  of  vSt.  Louis,  Mo,  and  had  Laura,  John  and  Hubbard),  Eliza- 
beth (b  May  7,  i860),  Willie  (b  Dec  27,  1S63),  and  Ruth  (b  Feb  7,  1874). 


DESCENT    LINE    OF    THOMAS    SCRANTON    HUBBARD, 

URBANA,  ILL. 

George  Hubbard — Elizabeth  Watts,  Daniel  Hubbard — Mary  Clark, 
Daniel  Hubbard — Susannah  Bailey,  Jeremiah  Hubbard — Alice  Shaler, 
Jeremiah  Hubbard — Flora  Hazelton,  George  Hubbard — Electa  Bronson. 

THOMAS  SCRANTON  HUBBARD,  eighth  child  of  George  and 
Electa  (Bronson)  Hubbard,  was  born  Sep  25,  1825,  in  Middletown,  Ct, 
and  received  his  rudimentary  education  there.  In  1849  he  graduated  at 
Yale.  Nov  14,  1849,  he  married  Jane  Eliza  Woodruff  (who  has  given 
some  attention  to  genealogical  research),  daughter  of  De  Wyllys  Wood- 
ruff, of  Meriden,  Ct.,  and  in  the  Fall  of  1854  removed  to  Urbana,  Cham- 
paign County,  111.,  where,  with  two  other  gentlemen,  he  established  the 
first  banking  institution  in  the  county.  He  also  became  cashier  of  the 
Grand  Prairie  Bank  (opened  in  the  following  Spring),  a  bank  of  issue, 
with  a  $100,000  circulation,  secured  by  Missouri  State  Bonds..  This 
bank  had  a  branch  institution  at  Champaign.  Since  1861  he  has  en- 
gaged extensively  in  the  hardware  trade,  and  was  the  Treasurer  during 
its  existence  of  the  Urbana  and  Champaign  Railroad  Co.  He  was  ap- 
pointed also  in  1861  "Fiscal  Agent"  for  the  sale  of  Swamp  Lands  in 
Champaign  County,  in  which  position  of  trust  no  bonds  were  required 
from  him,  so  strong  was  the  confidence  in  his  probity.  Mr.  HUBBARD 
has  been  an  alderman  in  the  City  Council,  is  Republican  in  his  politics, 
and  has  been  the  ruling  elder  in  the  Presbyterian  Church  there  since 
its  organization  in  1857.  Children — Wvli  vs  Woodruff  (b  Mch  8,  1S52, 
d  May  20,  1852),  George  Wyllys  (b  June  25,  1853,  m  Edna  Post  of 
Cromwell,  Ct,  Sep  4,  1S74),  Mary  Woodruff  (b  Mch  13,  [858,  m  Dr. 
Austin  M.  Lindlcy  Nov  17,  1886),  Julia  Electa  (b  Sep  3,  1861,  m  Thomas 
A.  Insley  Aug  16,  1887)  and  Harry  Thomas  (b  Jan  4,  1S66,  m  May  12. 
1SS7,  Helen  M.  Riley.) 


360 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 


DESCENT    LINE    OF    JOHN    ERASTUS    HUBBARD, 

MONTPELIER,  VT. 

George  Hubbard— Elizabeth  Watts,  Samuel  Hubbard— Sarah  Kirby, 

John  Hubbard— Mrs.  Agnes  (Spencer)   Humphries,  John   Hubbard— 

Hannah  Cadwell,  Timothy  Hubbard— Sarah  Gillett,  Roger  Hubbard— 

Fanny  Burbank,  Erastus  Hubbard— Arabella  Gratia  Blake. 

JOHN  ERASTUS  HUBBARD,  youngest  of  the  two  children  of 
Erastus  and  Arabella  Gratia  (Blake)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Montpelier, 
Vt.,  Oct  24,  1847,  and  educated  in  the  public  schools  and  at  Washington 
County  Grammar  School.  In  1 866  he  engaged  in  business  in  Boston,  Mass., 
for  three  years,  and  in  1875  went  abroad  and  traveled  for  a  year  in  for- 
eign countries.  Returning  to  his  native  town  Mr.  HUBBARD  devoted 
himself  to  the  management  of  the  extensive  business  interests  which 
his  father  was  compelled  to  abandon  on  account  of  his  failing  eyesight. 
One  enterprise  of  his  was  the  development  of  an  extensive  system  for 
supplying  Montpelier  with  "  pure  spring  water."  In  1S94  he  undertook 
the  construction  of  a  handsome  building  to  be  known  as  the  Kellogg- 
Hubbard  Public  Library,  which,  when  completed,  will  be  donated  to 
the  town.  Mr.  HUBBARD  has  extensive  real  estate  interests  there, 
which  have  become  valuable  through  the  capable  management  of  his 
father  and  himself.  He  is  a  member  of  the  "  Sons  of  the  American 
Revolution,"  and  has  never  married*  His  father  was— 

ERASTUS  HUBBARD,  eldest  child  of  Roger  and  Fanny  (Burbank) 
Hubbard,  who  was  born  in  Montpelier  Sep  8,  1S11,  and  died  there  Oct 
10,  1890;  he  married  May  2,  1837,  Arabella  Gratia  Blake  (b  in  Chelsea, 
Vt.,  Nov  26,  1 81 5,  now  living— 1894),  dan  Amplias  Blake  (b  in  Keene, 
N.  H.,  Nov  27,  1778,  son  of  Nathan,  Nathan,  Robert,  and  John  of  Wrent- 
ham,  Mass.— 1636)  and  Mary  (Paine)  Blake,  and  gr  dau  Seth  and  Lydia 
(Lester)  Paine.  ERASTUS  HUBBARD  attended  the  town  schools 
and  Washington  County  Grammar  School  and  then  entered  mercantile 
life,  which  he  pursued  from  1832  to  1855.  In  1848  an  explosion  in  his 
store  caused  his  almost  entire  blindness  later  in  life.  He  was  one  of 
Montpelier's  substantial  citizens,  and  in  1857  signed  a  $100,000  bond  to 
secure  the  rebuilding  of  the  State  House  at  Montpelier  which  was  de- 
•  stroyed  by  fire  that  year.  He  never  desired  official  preferment,  but 
.  contented  himself  with  doing  unostentatious  good  and  enjoying  the  re- 
spect and  good-will  of  his  fellow-townsmen.  His  large  real  estate  in- 
terests passed  into  the  hands  of  his  only  son  at  his  death.  His  only 
daughter  Lucy  (b  in  Montpelier  May  6,  1838)  married  in  Jan,  1865, 
Hon.  Benjamin  Franklin  Fifield  (son  of  Col.  Orange  Fifield  of  Orange, 
Vt.)  of  Montpelier,  Vt.,  a  prominent  railroad  and  corporation  lawyer  of 
that  State,  and  has  three  daughters. 

*  See  page  447  for  additional  data. 


ABRIDGED  LINES   OF  DESCENT.  <>6i 

DESCENT    LINE    OF   DR.   THOMAS    HUBBARD, 
TOLEDO,  OHIO. 

George  Hubbard — Elizabeth  Watts,  Nathaniel  Hubbard — Mary 
Earle,  Nathaniel  Hubbard — Sarah  Johnson,  Nehemiah  Hubbard — 
Sarah  Sill,  Isaac  Hubbard — Ruth  Coleman,  William  Hubbard — Cath- 
erine Hulbert,  Amos  Fiske  Hubbard — Ursula  Pomeroy  Graves. 

THOMAS  HUBBARD,  third  son  of  Amos  Fiske  and  Ursula  P. 
(Graves)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Ashtabula,  Ohio,  July  22,  1859,  and 
adopted  medicine  as  his  life's  profession.  He  graduated  from  the 
University  of  Pennsylvania  in  1885,  and  was  for  a  time  a  student  in  the 
General  Hospital  of  Vienna,  Austria.  He  settled  in  Toledo,  Ohio,  and 
now  is  Secretary  of  the  Ohio  State  Medical  Society.  He  married  Sep 
4,  1S89,  Charissa  Graves  (b  Nov  2,  1859),  daughter  of  Charles  E.  and 
Mary  Ann  Graves  of  Greenfield,  Mass.  Children — Amos  Graves  (b 
Feb  14,  1891,  d  same  day),  and  Amos  Holland  (b  Feb  27,  1S92). 
His  father — 

AMOS  FISKE  HUBBARD,  was  born  in  Holland  Patent,  N.  Y., 
July  8,  1823,  and  died  in  Ashtabula,  Jan  21,  1893.  He  came  to  Ash- 
tabula Harbor  in  1834  and  was  for  forty  years  cashier  there  of  the 
Farmer's  National  Bank.  He  married  Nov  15,  1853,  (1)  Ursula  Pomeroy 
Graves,  daughter  of  Josiah  Dwight  and  Abigail  (Pomeroy)  Graves. 
Children — Charissa  (b  Sep  12,  1S54,  d  May  6,  1872),  William  (b  June  3, 
1856,  d  Sep  19,  1883),  Dwight  Graves  (b  Dec  31,  1857,  d  Sep  24,  1859), 
Thomas  (see  foregoing),  Sarah  Caskev  (b  July  24,  1861),  Katherine  (b 
June  14,  1863,  d  Aug  4,  1864),  John  Coleman  and  Amos  Fiske,  twins  (b 
Mch  11,  1865)  and  Graves  (b  Mch  15,  1870,  d  Aug  2,  1870).  AMOS 
FISKE  HUBBARD  married  Oct  15,  1874,  (2)  Emily  Holland.  Chil- 
dren— Abigail  (b  Aug  16,  1875),  and  George  Holland  (b  Nov  5,  1878). 


DESCENT  LINE  OF  EDWIN  BRIGHAM  HUBBARD,  ST.  PAUL, 
MINN.;  ADDISON  THOMAS  HUBBARD,  CLEVELAND, 
OHIO;  AND  ERVIN  SAMUEL  HUBBARD,  WASHINGTON, 
D.  C. 

George  Hubbard — Mary  Bishop,  John  Hubbard — Mary  Merriam, 
Jonathan  Hubbard — Hannah  Rice,  Samuel  Hubbard — Mary  Clarke, 
Samuel  Hubbard — Eunice  Woodward,  Elisha  Hubbard — Mercy  Hub- 
bard, Samuel  Woodward  Hubbard — Betsey  Hubbard,  Samuel  Brigham 
Hubbard — Sarah  Maria  Holmes. 

EDWIN  BRIGHAM  HUBBARD,  eldest  son  of  Samuel  Brigham 
and  Sarah  Maria  (Holmes)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Holden,  Mass.,  Oct 
18,  1842,  and  in  1865  removed  to  New  York  City,  and  engaged  in  the 
wholesale  dry  goods  business.     He  married  at  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  July  16, 


362  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

1873,  Anna  Eliza  Davis,  daughter  of  William  Whitney  and  Maria  Sabra 
(Risley)  Davis.  In  1882  he  removed  to  St.  Paul,  Minn.,  where  he  is  now 
engaged  in  the  dry  goods  business.  Children — Edna  Davis  (b  June  22, 
1875),  Edith  Mildred  (b  Aug  16,  1883),  and  Ethel  Gladys  (b  Mch  1, 
1886). 

ADDISON  THOMAS  HUBBARD,  second  son  of  Samuel  Brigham 
and  Sarah  Maria  (Holmes)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Holden  Oct  10,  1S48. 
In  1863  he  learned  the  jewelry  business  in  Boston,  Mass.,  and  in  1870 
removed  to  Cleveland,  O.,  and  entered  a  jewelry  house  as  a  clerk. 
From  this  position  he  steadily  advanced  to  the  front  rank  by  close 
attention  to  the  demands  of  commercial  life,  and  is  now  owning  and 
controlling  one  of  the  largest  wholesale  establishments  in  the  West,  the 
same  one  that  he  began  mercantile  life  in  as  clerk.  He  married  in 
Cleveland  Sep  24,  1884,  Mrs.  Katherine  (Beckwith)  Knight,  a  widow, 
with  one  child,  named  Walter  Oliphant  Knight.  Children— Sterling 
Beckwith  (b  July  8,  1885),  and  Marguerite  (b  Mch  18,  1887). 

ERVIN  SAMUEL  HUBBARD,  third  son  of  Samuel  Brigham  and 
Sarah  Maria  (Holmes)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Holden  Sep  28,  1850,  and 
attended  School  at  the  Worcester  Academy.  After  completing  his 
studies  there  he  applied  himself  to  the  mastery  of  the  profession  of 
architecture,  and  attended  for  that  purpose  at  Boston  the  Massachusetts 
Institute  of  Technology.  Mr.  HUBBARD  now  holds  a  responsible 
position  in  the  draughting  division  of  the  Quartermaster-General's 
Office,  War  Department,  Washington,  D.  C.  He  married  Apl  25,  1882, 
at  Pennfield,  New  Brunswick,  Sarah  Elizabeth  Prescott,  daughter  of 
Jesse  and  Abigail  (Young)  Prescott.  Children— Helen  Prescott  (b 
Mch  12,  1884),  and  Lawrence  Ervin  (b  Sep  11,  1S86).     His  father— 

SAMUEL  BRIGHAM  HUBBARD,  second  son  of  Samuel  Wood- 
ward and  Betsey  (Hubbard)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Holden  Oct  13, 
1812,  and  died  there  Feb  23,  1885.  He  was  one  of  H olden 's  substan- 
tial citizens,  interested  in  everything  pertaining  to  the  welfare  of  the 
town,  and  an  active  member  of  the  Congregational  Church  at  the  time 
of  his  death,  serving  it  after  1865  for  many  years  as  Deacon.  He  mar- 
ried at  West  Boyleston,  Mass.,  May  3,  1841,  Sarah  Maria  Holmes,  oldest 
daughter  of  Thomas  and  Sally  (Graves)  Holmes.  His  widow  is  still 
living  (1894)  in  Holden  at  the  age  of  76.  Besides  his  three  sons,  Mr. 
HUBBARD  had  two  daughters.  Sarah  Jane,  the  eldest,  was  born  in 
Holden  Sep  18,  1844,  and  married  there  June  8,  1869  Alfred  Mansfield 
of  Gloucester,  Mass.,  and  had  Samuel  Hubbard,  Harvey,  and  George 
Rogers  Mansfield.  Mr.  HUBBARD'S  youngest  daughter,  Elizabeth 
Wheaton  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Holden  July  21,  1846,  and  still  lives 
there  (1894)  with  her  mother. 


ABRIDGED  LINES   OF  D ESC  EXT.  363 

DESCENT  LINE  OF  JOHN    PECK  HUBBARD, 
ORANGE.    CO XX. 

William  Hubbard — Judith  Knapp,  William  Hubbard — Mary  Rogers, 
John  Hubbard — Ann  Leverett,  John  Hubbard — Mabel  Russell,  John 
Hubbard — Mrs.  Elizabeth  Stevens,  John  Hubbard — Rebecca  Dicker- 
man,  John  Hubbard — Anna  Atwater,  John  Hubbard — Sally  Peek. 

JOHN  PECK  HUBBARD,  eldest  son  of  John  and  Sally  (Peck) 
Hubbard,  was  born  July  23,  1811,  and  lived  in  Orange,  near  New  Haven, 
Ct.  His  ancestral  home  was  at  Woodmont,  on  the  sea-shore,  now  a 
well-known  watering  place.  Here  for  many  years  the  descendants  of 
the  Ipswich  Line  gathered  in  summer  in  annual  reunion.  His  memory 
is  revered  by  them,  for  he  died  in  1880.  He  was  a  successful  farmer,  a 
worthv  private  citizen,  and  an  exemplary  Christian  gentleman.  He 
married  Apl  9,  1843,  Sarah  Ann  Clarke.     Children — 

JOHN  MERWIN  HUBBARD,  eldest  son  of  John  Peck  and  Sarah 
Ann  (Clark)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Orange,  Ct,  March  12,  1844,  and  at 
eighteen  years  of  age  entered  the  United  States  Navy  to  serve  in  the 
late  civil  war.  He  was  assigned  to  the  frigate  Colorado,  but  in  Feb- 
ruarv,  1863,  was  discharged,  on  account  of  severe  sickness,  from  the 
Brooklyn  hospital  Mr.  HUBBARD  lived  upon  the  family  homestead 
for  many  years.     He  is  well  known  as  a  patriotic  citizen,  and  a  member 

of  the  Connecticut  Naval  Veteran  Asso- 
ciation, also  the  Veteran  Memorial  As- 
sociation of  West  Haven,  Ct.  He  mar- 
ried Oct  4,  1S74,  Laura  Booth  Davis.  1) 
Nov  24,  1850,  dan  of  Anson  Riley  and 
Mary  Newton  (Ailing)  Davis  of  Quakers 
Farms,  Oxford,  New  Haven  County.  Ct. 
Stella  Laura,  their  only  child,  was 
born  Aug  26,  1876,  and  died  Oct  12, 
I  1S92,  of  bone  cancer,  a  most  torturing 

malady.  She  bore  patiently  and  bravely 
suffering  indescribable.  Her  portrait 
herewith  indicates  that  the  sweetness 
and  saintliness  therein  delineated,  have 
earned  her  the  martyr's  crown  among 

STELLA    LAURA    HUBBARD  ^  ^^ 

But  when  the  sun  in  all  his  state 

Illumed  the  Eastern  skies, 
She  passed  through  Glory's  morning  gate 

And  walked  in  Paradise— Aldrich. 


364  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

One  day  during  her  illness  she  exclaimed,  "  Dear  Papa:  When  I  wake 
up  in  the  next  world,  I  shall  watch,  and  watch,  and  wait  and  wait  for 
you  to  come!" 

LEWIS  CLARK  HUBBARD,  second  son  of  John  Peck  Hubbard, 
was  born  Dec  14,  1845.  He  resides  near  the  old  Hubbard  homestead,  is 
a  farmer,  and  a  member  of  Wopowage  Lodge  I.  O.  O.  F.  No.  14.  He 
married  Oct  23,  1878,  Frances  Aurelia  Smith,  b  Nov  16,  1846,  dau  of 
Marcus  and  Lucy  Ann  (Garlic)  Smith,  of  Orange,  Ct.  Children — John 
Brace  (b  Dec  25,  1879),  Kathieeelle  May  (b  Nov  2,  1883)  and  Harry 
Beach  (b  Sep  2,  1885). 

EDWARD  EUGENE  HUBBARD,  third  son  of  John  Peck  Hub- 
bard, was  born  June  10,  1848,  and  resides  on  the  old  homestead.  He 
married  Nov  15,  1877,  Vara  L.  Smith,  b  May  13,  1856,  dau  of  Marcus 
and  Lucy  Ann  (Garlic)  Smith,  of  Orange,  Ct.  Children — Minnie  Vara 
(b  Nov  15,  1878),  Bertha  May  (b  Nov  12,  1880),  William  Eugene  (b 
Mch  25,  1883),  Nellie  Louise  (b  Sep  23,  1884,  d  Aug  9,  1885),  Florence 
Eunice  (b  June  28,  1889)  and  Clarence  Dana  (b  Nov  4,  1894). 

ANNA  ATWATER  HUBBARD,  eldest  daughter  of  John  Peck 
Hubbard,  was  born  June  26,  1850.  She  married  June  28,  1870,  William 
Mayhew  Cottle,  a  prominent  carpenter  and  builder  of  Waterbury,  Ct.; 
no  issue. 

Rev.  GEORGE  HENRY  HUBBARD,  of  Foo  Chow,  China,  fourth 
son  of  John  Peck  Hubbard,  was  born  Jan  11,  1855,  and,  like  many  of 
his  progenitors,  determined  to  be  a  scholar  and  a  clergyman.  He  grad- 
uated from  Yale  in  the  class  of  'Si  and  entered  the  service  of  the 
American  Board  of  Missions,  marrying  July  24,  18S4,  Nellie  Louise 
Peet,  daughter  of  his  predecessor,  Rev.  Lyman  Peet,  who  served  at  Foo 
Chow,  China,  about  30  years  in  the  capacity  of  missionary.  Rev. 
GEORGE  HENRY  HUBBARD  sometimes  drops  into  a  poetic  strain 
as  a  mental  recreation.  He  once  published  a  volume  entitled  "Thought 
Meanders,  By  Miss  Waters."  Rev.  Mr.  HUBBARD  returned  last  fall 
to  China  after  a  pleasant  visit  in  this  country.  Children — Nela 
Louisa  (b  Sep  12,  1885),  Daisy  Fern  (b  Jan  7,  1887),  Winifred  May  (b 
in  February,  1889),  George  Graham  (b  Nov  3,  1890)  and  Norman  Squires 
(b  in  1892). 

MARY  ELIZABETH  HUBBARD,  second  daughter  of  John  Peck 
Hubbard,  was  born  Feb  17,  1857.  She  married  Charles  R.  Lawrence 
of  Waterbury,  Ct.,  a  machinist.  Children — George  Hubbard  (b  Apl 
19,  1883),  Anna  Louisa  (b  Sep  12,  1S86),  William  (b  Apl  18,  1888, 
din  Nov,  1889). 

WILLIAM  RUSSELL  HUBBARD,  fifth  son  of  John  Peck  Hub- 
bard, was  born  Nov  18,  1859,  and  died  May  20,  1871. 


ABRIDGED   LINES  OF  DESCENT.  365 

DESCENT  LINE  OF  HARLAN   PAGE  HUBBARD, 
NEW  YORK  CITY. 

George  Hubbard — Elizabeth  Watts,  Samuel  Hubbard — Sarah  Kirby, 
Samuel  Hubbard — Martha  Peck,  Watts  Hubbard — Mary  Stanley,  Watts 
Hubbard — Lois  Corey,  Asahel  Hubbard — Cinthia  Smith,  Colman  Smith 
Hubbard— Mary  Platts  Read. 

HARLAN  PAGE  HUBBARD  (publisher  of  this  book),  eldest  son  of 
Colman  Smith  and  Mary  Platts  (Read)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Deep 
River,  Ct,  December  29,  1845.  His  life  work  has  been  in  the  main  con- 
nected with  newspaper  and  publishing  business,  having  passed  through 
all  grades  from  carrier  boy  to  editorial  and  business  management.  He 
also  took  a  course  in  Yale  Law  School,  '75.  For  many  years  (com- 
mencing 1874)  he  conducted  a  newspaper  advertising  agency  at  New 
Haven,  Ct,  paying  out  to  the  press  of  this  country  and  others  millions 
of  dollars  for  the  advertising  of  his  customers,  many  of  whom  were  and 
still  are  noted  successes.  An  interesting  article  on  a  famous  book  which 
he  published  a  dozen  years  ago  will  be  found  under  Miscellaneous. 

At  the  World's  Columbian  Exposition  at  Chicago,  Mr.  Hubbard  made 
an  exhibit  of  the  titles  and  heads  of  over  ten  thousand  newspapers  from 
all  countries.  It  was  located  in  the  Editorial  Reception  Rooms  in  the 
Administration  Building,  and  attracted  a  great  deal  of  attention.  A 
medal  and  diploma  were  awarded. 

Mr.  Hubbard  is  now  in  special  newspaper  work  in  New  York  City, 
successfully  conducting  several  journals  of  large  circulation.  He  mar- 
ried July  7,  1867,  Adelia  Anna  Crocker,  of  Boston,  Mass.,  daughter  of 
George  and  Adelia  (Foster)  Crocker  of  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Children — 
Charles  Foster  (b  Aug  2,  1868,  d  Oct  25,  1892,  m  Dec  15,  1889,  Rosa 
Leigh  Lum  of  West  Haven,  Ct.,  and  had  Ruth  Isabel,  b  Sep  15,  1892), 
Alice  Read  (b  Aug  29,  1869,  d  May  22,  1S86,  in  New  Haven,  Ct.),  Guy 
Homer  (b  Jan  7,  1874),  and  Florence  Eddy  (b  Nov  20,  1881). 


DESCENT  LINE  OF  DR.  CHARLES  HUBBARD, 
BROOKLYN,  N.  Y. 

James  Hubbard — Elizabeth  Bayles,  James  Hubbard — Rachel  Bergen, 
James  (Elias?)  Hubbard — Altje  Ryder,  Jacobus  Hubbard — Rebecca 
Swart,  Elias  Hubbard — Eleanor  Hendrickson,  William  Henry  Hubbard 
—Ellen  Cook. 

CHARLES  HUBBARD,  only  son  of  William  Henry  and  Ellen  (Cook) 
Hubbard,  was  born  in  Tinton  Falls,  Shrewsbury  township,  Monmouth 
County,  N.  J.,  July  7,  1839.  He  attended  Holmdel  Academy  and  Wil- 
liam W.  Woodhull's  Select  School  for  Boys  at  Freehold,  N.  J.,  and  then 
prepared  himself  for  the  mastery  of  dental  science  by  a  four  years' 


366  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY, 

course  of  instruction  from  1858,  principally  under  the  tutorship  of  Dr. 
J.  B.  Brown  of  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.  Upon  passing  a  successful  examination 
as  dental  surgeon  he  settled  in  Red  Bank,  N.  J.,  became  a  member  of 
the  New  Jersey  Dental  Society,  and  established  very  quickly  his  repu- 
tation as  a  master  in  the  profession.  He  contributed  able  papers  to  the 
society,  and  in  a  most  successful  diagnosis  of  a  very  puzzling  and  re- 
sponsible case  at  a  clinic  he  was  conceded  to  be  most  skilful  in  his  art. 
In  1SS0  he  removed  to  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.  Besides  his  love  for  his  profes- 
sion the  doctor  cultivates  his  passionate  desire  for  antiquarian  relics, 
and  while  being  possessed  of  an  Old  Hubbard  Bible  (see  elsewhere)  he 
owns  also  other  choice  volumes  and  two  very  ancient  old-fashioned 
clocks,  one  of  which  once  belonged  to  the  Barkeloo  family  of  New 
Jersey  and  the  other,  made  by  Henry  Wallis  of  London,  has  been  from 
time  immemorial  in  the  Hubbard  family  of  his  branch.  The  Doctor  is 
a  member  of  the  Carleton,  Montauk,  and  Logan  Clubs  of  Brooklyn,  be- 
sides being  a  Knight  Templar  and  member  of  various  dental  societies 
in  New  York,  New  Jersey  and  upon  Long  Island,  and  has  been  quite 
active,  as  was  his  father,  in  pursuing  genealogical  studies.  Oct 
20,  1869,  he  married  Leonora  Turner,  daii  of  Thomas  and  Rebecca 
(Garland)  Turner  of  Newcastle,  Del.  Children — Laura  Garland  (b 
Sep  21,  1872,  in  Red  Bank,  N.  J.),  and  Henry  Randolph  (b  June  29, 
1874,  in  Red  Bank,  N.  J.).     His  father— 

WILLIAM  HENRY  HUBBARD,  son  of  Elias  and  Eleanor  (Hen- 
drickson)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Monmouth  County,  N.  J.,  Sep  29,  181 2, 
and  received  an  academic  course  at  Baptisttown  Academy.  At  the  age 
of  17  he  began  the  study  of  medicine  at  Tinton  Falls,  N.  J.,  with  his 
uncle,  Dr.  Jacobus  Hubbard,  Jr.,  a  most  successful  practitioner.  He 
also  studied  with  Dr.  C.  C.  Blauvelt  of  Holmdel,  N.  J.,  and  graduated  in 
1834  from  the  College  of  Physicians  and  Surgeons  in  New  York,  taking 
his  uncle's  office  and  practice  when  he  retired  from  the  profession.  In 
1856,  during  a  yellow  fever  epidemic,  he  removed  to  Gravesend,  L.  I., 
the  home  of  his  first  American  ancestor  and  there  remained  until  1862, 
when  he  returned  to  New  Jersey  and  made  his  home  at  Red  Bank.  His 
practice  covered  a  large  area,  which  he  faithfully  attended  to  for  over 
fifty-three  years.  He  was  a  prominent  member  of  the  Monmouth 
County  Medical  Society,  being  its  President  in  1856,  and  of  the  Odd 
Fellow  and  Masonic  fraternities,  and  died  in  Red  Bank,  N.  J.,  Jan  28, 
1887.  October  10,  1836,  he  married  Ellen  Cook,  dau  of  John  and  Mary 
(Morris)  Cook  of  Tinton  Falls,  N.  J.  Children — Charles  (see  foregoing) 
Mary  Ellen  (b  in  Tinton  Falls,  Mch  31,  1838,  m  June  6,  1861,  Stephen 
Stryker  Williamson  and  lives  at  Gravesend)  and  Eliza  (b  in  Tinton 
Falls  June  29,  1847,  d  unm  May  14,  1S82). 


ABRIDGED  LINES   OF  DESCENT.  367 

DESCENT   LINE  OF   DR.  GEORGE  WHIPPLE  HUBBARD, 

NASHVILLE,   TENN. 
Georo-e    Hubbard-Mary    Bishop,  John    Hubbard-Mary    Merriam, 
Jonathan  Hubbard-Hannah  Rice  Jonathan  Hubbard-Rcbecca Brown. 
Jonathan  Hubbard-Abigail  Jennison,  David  Hubbard-Abigail  Laba- 
ree   Jonathan  B.  Hubbard— Annis  Whipple. 

GEORGE  WHIPPLE  HUBBARD,  fourth  son  of  Jonathan  B.  and 
\nnis  (Whipple)  Hubbard,  was  born  August  n,  1841,  in  Charlestown, 
N   H    and  educated  at  New  Hampshire  Conference  Seminary  and  New 
London  Literary  and  Scientific  Institution;  dele-ate  of  the  Christian 
Commission  in  the  Army  of  the  Potomac,  and  also  in  the  Army  of  the 
Cumberland  in  1864;  taught  a  regimental  school  m  the  noth .  U.  S.C.  1. 
in  1865-6-  Principal  of  the  Belle  View  Public  School,  Nashville,  Tenn, 
1867-74    '  He  graduated  in  the  Medical  Department,  University  of  Ten- 
nessee in  1876"  and  in  Medical  Department  of  Vanderbilt  University  in 
l87g    'in  1876  he  was  appointed  by  the  Freedmen's  Aid  Society  of  the 
ME   Church  to  organize  a  medical  department  of  Central  Tennessee 
Colleo-e      This  department  has  since  been  known  as  the  Meharry  Medi- 
cal College,  and  was  the  first  medical  school  established  in  the  South  for 
the  education  of  colored  physicians;  and  more  than  one-half  of  the  col- 
ored physicians  of  the  Southern  States  are  graduates  of  this  Institution 
In  1886  a  Dental  Department  was  added  to  it;  in  1889  a  Pharmaceutical 
Department;  and  for  the  present  session,  1894-5,  there   are  eighteen 
members  in  the  Faculty.     Dr.  HUBBARD  has  been  Dean  of  the  Col- 
lege since  its  first  organization.     From  1876  to  1891  he  was  Professor  of 
Natural  Science  in  Central  Tennessee  College,  and  from  1889  to  1094 
was  acting  Dean  and   Professor  of  Hygiene   and  Texicology  in   the 
Medical  Department  of  New  Orleans  University.     He  is  a  member  of 
The  American  Medical  Association  and  also  of  The  American  Associa- 
tion for  the  Advancement  of  Science.     Dr.  HUBBARD  married  De- 
cember 24,  1869,  Sarah  A.  Lyon  of  Allegheny  City,  Pa. 

DESCENT  LINE   OF   LUCIUS  LEE   HUBBARD, 
CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 

George    Hubbard-Mary   Bishop,   John   Hubbard-Mary   Merriam 
Isaac  Hubbard-Anne  Warner,  Isaac  Hubbard-Christine  Gunn  Israel 
Hubbard-Abigail   Smith,  Lucius    Hubbard-Anne   Pomeroy,  Lucius 
Vireiluis.  Hubbard— Annie  Elizabeth  Lee. 

LUCIUS  LEE  HUBBARD,  only  child  of  Lucius  Virgilius  and 
Annie  Elizabeth  (Lee)  Hubbard,  was  born  at  Cincinnati,  Ohio  August 
7  x849  After  having  attended  Woodward  High  School  m  that  city  foi 
three  years,  he  spent  two  years  at  Phillips  Exeter  Academy,  and  grad- 


.68  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

uated  from  Harvard  College  in  1872.  He  studied  Roman  and  interna- 
tional law  at  Bonn,  Germany,  for  one  year,  graduated  from  the  Boston 
Law  School  in  1875,  and  practised  law  for  several  years  in  Boston.  In 
1883  he  returned  to  Germany,  and  studied  mineralogy,  petrography  and 
chemistry  at  Bonn  and  Heidelberg,  taking  the  degrees  of  A.  M.,  Ph.  D. 
at  the  former  university  in  1886.  Three  years  after  his  return  to  this 
country  he  became  Assistant  on  the  Geological  Survey  of  Michigan, 
and  in  July,  1893,  State  Geologist  of  that  State.  He  published  in 
Tschermak's  Mittheilungen,  Vienna,  1887,  "  Beitraege  zur  Kenntniss 
der  Nosean-fuehrenden  Auswuerflinge  des  Laacher  Sees;  "  in  1S79,  at 
Boston,  "  Summer  Vacations  at  Moosehead  Lake  and  Vicinity,"  of 
which  'subsequent  editions  bear  the  title  "  Hubbard's  Guide  to  Moose- 
head  Lake  and  Northern  Maine;"  and  in  1884,  "Woods  and  Lakes  of 
Maine;  "  "On  Powellite  from  a  New  Locality,"  G.  A.  Koenig  and  L.  L. 
Hubbard,  1893;  "Two  new  geological  cross  sections  of  Keweenaw 
Point,"  1894.  Mr.  HUBBARD  married  Sep  29,  1875,  Frances  Johnson 
Lambard  of  Augusta,  Me.  Children— Charlotte  Armitage  (b  Dec 
13,  1876),  Lucius  Lambard  (b  in  June,  1879,  d  y),  Lucius  Lambard  b 
Aug  5,  1880,  d  Sep  3,  1886),  Frances  Johnson  (b  Dec  5,  1885)  and  Julia 
Lambard  (b  July  5,  1892).     His  father— 

LUCIUS  VIRGILIUS  HUBBARD,  son  of  Lucius  and  Anne  (Pom- 
eroy)  Hubbard,  was  born  at  Chester,  Vt,  March  18,  1803,  and  graduated 
from  Harvard  College  in  1826.  He  taught  for  two  years  in  the  Boston 
Latin  School,  and  afterwards  went  into  business  as  a  commission  mer- 
chant at  New  Orleans,  La.,  where  he  died  of  cholera  April  17,  1849.  At 
an  early  age  he  developed  studious  habits  and  a  scholarly  taste,  which 
he  continued  to  cultivate  throughout  his  life,  and  became  master  of 
several  languages.  He  married  Oct  1 9, 1 843,  ( 1 )  Mary  Peacock,  who  died 
July  29,  1844,  leaving  one  daughter,  Mary  Peacock.  In  1848  he  married 
(2)  Annie  Elizabeth  Lee,  and  had  one  son,  Lucius  Lee  (see  foregoing). 

DESCENT   LINE  OF  DR.  FRANK  ALLEN  HUBBARD, 
TAUNTON,  MASS. 
Philip  Hubbard— Mrs.  Elizabeth  (Goodwin)  Emery,  Moses  Hubbard— 
Abigail  Heard,  John  Heard  Hubbard— Hannah  Neal,  Heard  Hubbard— 
I  Ruth   Allen,   Allen    Hubbard— Sarah    Bradbury   Lord,   Simeon    Pease 
Hubbard— Harriet  Ann  Barrett. 

FRANK  ALLEN  HUBBARD,  eldest  child  of  Simeon  Pease  and 
Harriet  Ann  (Barrett)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Worcester,  Mass.,  March 
8,  1852.  He  received  the  degree  of  A.  B.  from  Harvard  College  in  1873 
and  the  degree  of  M.  D.  from  New  York  University  in  1878.  To  reach 
a  hio-her  state  of  proficiency  in  his  profession  he  went  abroad  and  studied 


(Prof.  John  Hubbard  and  Dr.  George  Whipple  Hubbard  descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Guilford, 
Ct.:  Dr.  Charles  Hubbard  from  James  Hubbard  of  Gravesend,  L.  I.;  and  Rev.  George  Henry 
Hubbard  from  William  Hubbard  of  Ipswich,  Mass  ) 

369 


370  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

medicine  and  surgery  in  Vienna  in  1886.  Subsequently  he  spent  several 
years  more  at  Harvard  in  post-graduate  work.  He  was  Taunton's  city 
physician  in  1880-83,  member  of  American  Medical  Association,  mem- 
ber of  the  Morton  Hospital  staff,  and  since  1887  a  member  of  Taunton's 
School  Board.  In  1891  he  was  elected  President  of  The  Bristol  North 
District  of  the  (Mass.)  Medical  Society,  which  position  he  held  the  cus- 
tomary two  years.  June  30,  1885,  he  married  Annie  Louise  Field, 
daughter  of  George  Albert  Field  and  granddaughter  of  Albert  Field, 
the  well-known  manufacturer  of  tacks.  His  wife  died  Aug  29,  1892, 
leaving  Merrill  Field  (b  Dec  28,  1886).     His  father— 

Dr.  SIMEON  PEASE  HUBBARD,  was  born  Sep  20,  1827,  and  mar- 
ried at  Belchertown,  Mass.,  Nov  27,  1850,  Harriet  Ann  Barrett  (b  Feb 
26,  1830,  d  Nov  21,  1883),  daughter  of  Hon.  Leonard  Barrett.  Dr.  HUB- 
BARD did  efficient  medical  serviee  for  the  United  States  in  the  last 
civil  war,  both  on  the  field  of  battle  and  in  the  hospitals.  He  was  sta- 
tioned for  some  time  in  Washington,  D.  C,  at  Armory  Square  and 
Carver  Hospitals,  and  also  at  Camp  Barre.  He  has  practiced  medicine 
at  Worcester  and  Westfield,  Mass.,  and  at  Taunton  during  the  past 
thirty-five  years.  His  second  child,  Herbert  Newell  Hubbard,  was 
born  at  Westfield  Sep  1,  1857,  and  died  Oct  25,  1857.  His  only  daugh- 
ter, Jennie  Loraine  Hubbard  (b  Jan  17,  1859,  m  Nov  22,  1881,  at  Taun- 
ton, Rev.  Charles  Earle  Preston,  and  had  Earlc  Hubbard,  b  Dec  16,  1887, 
in  Lafayette,  R.  I.,  and  Car  let  on,  b  June  2,  1890,  in  Greenville,  R.  I.). 
Dr.  HUBBARD'S  fourth  and  youngest  child  was  born  Nov  6,  1S61,  and 
died  Feb  5,  1875. 

DESCENT  LINE  OF  WILLIAM  HENRY  HUBBARD, 
DULUTH,    MINN. 

George  Hubbard— Elizabeth  Watts,  Samuel  Hubbard— Sarah  Kirby, 
Samuel  Hubbard— Martha  Peck,  Watts  Hubbard— Mary  Stanley,  Watts 
Hubbard— Lois  Corey,  Isaac  Watts  Hubbard— Sarah  Ann  Townsend. 

WILLIAM  HENRY  HUBBARD,  eldest  son  of  Isaac  Watts  and 
Sarah  Ann  (Townsend)  Hubbard,  was  born  at  Windsor,  Vt,  Feb  26, 
1834.  He  graduated  at  Norwich  University,  Vt.,  in  1852,  and  for  a  time 
was  employed  as  civil  engineer  upon  a  railroad  in  Ohio.  In  1885  he 
went  to  Iowa,  and  was  engaged  in  banking  and  insurance  (mainly  at 
Iowa  City)  for  twenty-six  years.  Since  1881  he  has  lived  in  St.  Paul, 
Minn.,  and  Chicago,  111.,  removing  to  Duluth,  his  present  home,  in  1890. 
He  is  Vice-President  of  the  Schiller-Hubbard  Company,  a  concern  well 
known  locally  as  manufacturers  and  jobbers  of  cigars  and  tobacco.  Mr. 
HUBBARD,  although  a  busy  man,  finds  time  to  indulge  his  taste  for 
genealogical  research,  and  is  deeply  interested  in  bringing  to  light  and 


ABRIDGED  EEXES  OF  D ESC  EXT.  37l 

preserving  all  data  concerning  the  good  old  Hubbard  Family.  Feb  i, 
1859,  he  married  Mary  Williams  vStone  (b  Nov  5, 1835),  daughter  of  Cal- 
vin Reed  and  Susan  (Fitch)  Stone,  of  Worcester,  Mass.  Children — 
Ellex  Moore  (b  July  5, 1861)  and  Sarah  (b  Nov  10,  1866).  His  father — 
ISAAC  WATTS  HUBBARD,  sixth  child  of  Watts  and  Lois  (Corey) 
Hubbard,  was  born  Sep  3,  1794,  at  Meriden,  Ct.,  and  died  at  Windsor, 
Vt.,  May  16,  187 1.  He  came  with  his  father's  family  from  Connecticut 
to  Vermont  about  1800.  At  an  early  age  he  entered  the  store  of  Allan 
Haves,  and  a  few  years  later  saw  him  bookkeeper,  and  at  21  a  partner 
in  what  was  for  those  times  a  flourishing  business.  "WATTS  HUB- 
BARD," as  he  was  familiarly  called,  was  a  busy  man,  giving  his  time 
and  ability  not  only  to  his  own  affairs,  but  to  whatever  tended  to  build 
up  and  improve  his  town.  He  was  everybody's  friend — genial  and 
cheery  to  the  last  degree.  His  memory  will  long  be  kept  green  in  his 
old  home,  while  his  witty  sayings  have  become  a  part  of  Windsor's  local 
traditions.  He  married  Jan  7,  1829,  Sarah  Ann  Townsend  (b  in  Boston 
in  1S05)  of  Windsor,  who  at  this  writing  (1894)  is  enjoying  life  at  the 
age  of  89.  Three  children  survive — Mary  J.  (b  Nov  3,  1829),  widow  of 
the  late  Major  Edward  C.  Boynton,  U.  S.  A.;  William  Henry  (see  fore- 
going), and  George  W.  (b  Nov  20,  1836),  who  occupies  the  old  home- 
stead at  Windsor,  Vt.,  and  is  a  manufacturer  of  hardware  specialties. 


DESCENT  LINE  OF  WILLIAM  MATTHEW  STRADER, 
ASHTABULA,   OHIO. 

George  Hubbard— Elizabeth  Watts,  Nathaniel  Hubbard — Mary  Earle, 
Nathaniel  Hubbard — Sarah  Johnson,  Nehemiah  Hubbard — Sarah  Sill, 
Isaac  Hubbard— Ruth  Coleman,  Matthew  Hubbard— Mary  Willard, 
Cornelia  Frances  Hubbard — Peter  Wilson  Strader. 

WILLIAM  MATTHEW  STRADER,  fourth  child  of  the  seven 
children  of  Peter  Wilson  and  Cornelia  Frances  (Hubbard)  Strader,  was 
born  Feb  9,  1851,  in  Cincinnati,  Ohio,  and  there  attended  school,  also  at 
Racine,  Wis.  He  went  to  Minnesota  in  1872  for  a  change  of  climate 
but  returned  to  Cincinnati  in  1875.  From  there  he  removed  to  Ash- 
tabula and  engaged  in  business.  Mr.  STRADER  also  spent  two  years 
in  Spokane,  Wash.,  but  is  now  living  in  Ashtabula  with  his  mother. 
He  retired  in  1S80  from  the  hardware  firm  of  George  C.  Hubbard  &  Co. 
So  far  he  has  successfully  resisted  all  temptations  to  become  a  Benedict. 
His  mother — 

CORNELIA  FRANCES  HUBBARD  was  born  in  Ashtabula  Aug 
1,  181S,  and  in  journeying  to  Mt.  Pleasant,  Iowa,  in  the  Spring  of  1842, 
with  her  parents  and  sisters,  met  aboard  the  boat  running  from  Cincin- 
nati to  Burlington,  Iowa,  an  enterprising  young  steamboat  man,  Peter 


,72  HUBBARD   HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Wilson  Strader,  to  whom  she  was  married  Jan  2,  1843,  at  Mt.  Pleasant. 
The  same  day  her  sister  Catherine  married  Captain  Linus  Logan,  master 
of  the  boat  they  were  passengers  upon.  Peter  Wilson  Strader,  the 
husband  of  CORNELIA  FRANCES  HUBBARD,  was  born  in  Warren 
County,  N.  J.,  Nov  6,  1818,  and  removed  with  his  parents  to  Lebanon, 
Ohio.  He  served  an  apprenticeship  in  a  printing  office  there  and  then 
engaged  in  steamboating  upon  the  Ohio  and  Mississippi  Rivers  until  he 
was  thirty,  amassing  during  this  period  a  snug  property.  In  1S48  he 
began  to  operate  in  railroading,  banking  and  insurance,  and  in  1868 
enjoyed  the  distinction  of  being  the  first  Democrat  elected  to  Congress 
from  the  first  District  of  Ohio,  owing  to  his  personal  popularity.  He 
served  his  constituents  ably  and  faithfully,  but  declined  a  renomination. 
His  arduous  life  labors  greatly  impaired  his  health.  His  death  occurred 
in  Ashtabula  Feb  25,  1881,  though  he  was  buried  in  Cincinnati.  Chil- 
dren— Julia  Eliza  (b  Dec  4,  1843,  d  Nov  24,  1866),  Mary  Catherine 
(b  May  26,  1846,  d  Nov  12,  1885,  m  Apl  26,  1883,  Henry  Rees  Gould  of 
Omaha,  Neb.),  Jacob  (b  Nov  17,  1848,  lives  in  Cincinnati,  Ohio,  m  May  2, 
1872,  Alice  Beaman  of  Walnut  Hills,  Cincinnati,  and  had  Peter  Wilson, 
d  y,  Jacob  and  Edmund  S.  d  y),  William  Matthew  (see  foregoing), 
Peter  Wilson  (b  Oct  21, 1853,  attended  Kenyon  College  m  Oct  10,  1888, 
Sarah  Kepler  of  Erie,  Pa.,  living  in  Fairhaven,  Wash.),  Frances  Cor- 
nelia (b  Jan  31,  1857,  m  Oct  11,  1882,  Roger  W.  Bennett,  of  Brooklyn, 
N.  Y.,  and  had  Wilson  Sumner,  Grace  Strader  and  Elizabeth;  all  living 
in  Fairhaven,  Wash.),  George  Henry  (b  May  15,  1862,  m  Oct  10,  1887, 
Margaret  Marshall  of  Greenville,  S.  C,  and  had  George  McLcod  and 
Cornelia  Frances,  all  living  in  Florida). 


DESCENT  LINE  OF  REV.  THOMAS  SWAN  HUBBARD, 
STOCKBRIDGE,  VT. 

George  Hubbard — Mary  Bishop,  John  Hubbard — Mary  Merriam, 
Isaac  Hubbard — Anne  Warner,  John  Hubbard — Hannah  Cowles,  John 
Hubbard — Anne  Hunt,  Samuel  Hubbard — Elizabeth  Swan. 

THOMAS  SWAN  HUBBARD,  youngest  child  of  Samuel  and  Eliza- 
beth (Swan)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Franklin,  Vt,  Dec  20,  1811,  and 
graduated  from  Middlebury  College  in  1834  and  from  Andover  Theo- 
logical Seminary  in  1838.  He  was  pastor  of  Congregational  churches 
at  Stockbridge  and  Chelsea,  Vt.,  about  eight  years  each,  and  later  of 
churches  at  Dunton,  111.,  and  Gaysville  and  Rochester,  Vt.,  and  has  held 
also  various  civil  positions  in  life,  being  Superintendent  of  Schools  of 
Windsor  County,  and  a  member  for  many  years  of  both  branches  of  the 
Vermont  Legislature.  He  displayed  great  activity  and  earnestness  in 
the  debates  concerning  his  State's  welfare,  especially  at  the  convention 


ABRIDGED  LINES   OF  DESCENT.  373 

called  to  amend  the  State's  Constitution.  To  him  was  largely  due  the 
change  from  annual  to  biennial  sessions.  He  was  also  an  earnest 
Unionist  during  the  Rebellion,  and  has  practiced  faithfully  the  precepts 
he  has  taught  from  the  pulpit,  living  and  enjoying  always  to  the  fullest 
extent  the  blessings  of  his  faith.  At  all  times  was  he  the  ready  foeman 
of  intemperance  and  tobacco.  During  his  ministerial  career  he  accom- 
plished much  in  advancing  the  science  of  agriculture,  and  witnessed 
good  results  from  his  efforts.  Though  over  80,  his  mind  is  still  clear 
and  active,  and,  though  now  retired  from  the  ministry,  he  is  always 
ready  to  step  into  a  vacant  pulpit  and  deliver  a  forcible  discourse.  He 
is  the  sole  survivor  of  ten  children,  and  was  a  cousin  to  the  late  Henry 
Hubbard,  Governor  of  New  Hampshire.  He  married  at  Stockbridge, 
Vt.,  Sep  24,  1839,  Mary  Fay.  Children— Timothy  Fay  (b  Aug  5,  1841, 
d  Aug  11,  1843),  Catherine  Almira  (b  Mch  15,  1844,  m  Henry  M. 
McCracken,  D.D.,  New  York  City),  Thomas  C.  (b  Feb  15,  1847,  d  Mch 
20,  1881,  at  Ft.  Worth,  Tex.,  m  Sep  15,  1868,  Idella  Holt  of  Pittsfield, 
Vt.,  and  had  Laura  M.,  b  May  17,  1873;  Thomas  Holt,  b  Mch  15,  1876; 
and  Harvey  Morgan,  b  Feb  13,  1878).     His  father— 

SAMUEL  HUBBARD,  youngest  son  of  Rev.  John  and  Anne  (Hunt) 
Hubbard  of  Northfield,  Mass.,  was  born  in  Northfield,  Mass.,  in  Sep, 
1763,  and  died  Apl  9,  1844,  at  Franklin,  Vt.  His  wife,  Elizabeth  (Swan) 
Hubbard,  of  Worcester,  Mass.,  whom  he  married  (probably)  in  Jan, 
1790,  died  July  20,  1840,  at  Franklin,  Vt.  Children— John  (b  Aug  4, 
1791),  Nancy  (b  Nov  15,  1792,  m  Dr.  Abram  Thomson,  of  St.  Armand, 
Canada,  d  June  16,  1865),  Eliza  (b  Oct  14,  1794,  d  Dec  7,  1830),  Samuel 
(b  Dec  25,  1796,  d  Dec  25,  1812),  Erastus  (b  July  5,  1798,  d  Apl  9,  1877, 
m  (1)  Hannah  Best,  (2)  Catharine  Pennoyer,  (3)  Charity  Hubbard  and 
had  Henry),  Martha  Hunt  (b  June  16,  1800,  d  Sep  13,  1880,  m  Samuel 
E.  Chalker  of  New  Haven,  Vt.),  William  Swan  (b  Apl  25,  1802,  d  Dec 
7,  1825,  m  Charity  Moul  of  St.  Armand,  Canada,  and  had  William  J/.), 
Catherine  Lyman  (b  July  21,  1805,  d  Aug  17,  1879,  m  Alexander  Cull), 
Jonathan  Hunt  (b  Apl  3,  1807,  d  Apl  8,  1888,  m  Sarah  Cull  of  Halley, 
Canada),  and  Thomas  Swan  (see  foregoing). 


DESCENT   LINE    OF  REV.  WARREN   CALHOUN  HUBBARD, 

ROCHESTER,  N.  Y. 

George  Hubbard  — Mary  Bishop,  John  Hubbard  — Mary  Merriam, 
John  Hubbard  — Mary  Wright,  Isaac  Hubbard  — Hannah  Dickinson, 
Isaac  Hubbard— Hannah  Goodrich,  Hezekiah  Hubbard— Mabel  Hub- 
bard, Hezekiah  Hubbard— Tamasau  Andrews,  Richard  Dunning  Hub- 
bard— Charlotte  Moody,  Norman  Hubbard— Elise  Brooks. 


374  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

WARREN  CALHOUN  HUBBARD,  eldest  son  of  Norman  and  Elise 
(Brooks)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Jan  7,  1847,  and  pre- 
pared himself  for  the  ministry,  graduating  from  Falley  Seminary  at 
Fulton,  N.  Y.,  in  June,  1871,  and  being  ordained  deacon  in  the  Protestant 
Episcopal  Church  by  the  Rt.  Rev.  Bishop  Huntington  at  Trinity  Church, 
Utica,  N.  Y.,  May  1,  1873.  September  30,  1874,  the  same  Bishop  con- 
ferred upon  him  the  orders  of  priesthood  in  Trinity  Church,  at  Seneca 
Falls,  N.  Y.,  where  he  was  assistant  from  May  1,  1873,  to  May  1,  1876, 
when  he  became  its  Rector,  and  remained  so  until  Feb  1,  1877,  when  he 
returned  to  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  and  there  officiated  as  Rector  of  St.  Paul's 
until  Dec  1,  1889.  Rev.  Mr.  HUBBARD  is  a  trustee  of  De  Yeaux  Col- 
lege, Suspension  Bridge,  N.  Y.,  and  also  of  Cary  School,  Oakfield,  N.  Y. 
In  1886  he  received  a  number  of  votes  for  the  Bishopric  of  Easton,  Md., 
and  in  June,  1893,  the  Master  of  Arts  degree  from  Griswold  College  at 
Davenport,  Iowa.  Since  July  15,  1890,  he  has  been  the  highly  respected 
Rector  of  Trinity  Church  at  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  and  has  in  addition  to  his 
ecclesiastical  career  a  high  and  worthy  masonic  one.  In  January,  1882, 
he  was  made  a  master  mason  in  Altair  Lodge,  *No.  601,  at  Brooklyn. 
N.  Y.,  becoming  subsequently  its  senior  warden,  chaplain,  and  wor- 
shipful master,  also  grand  chaplain  of  the  grand  body  at  Rochester. 
He  received  his  chapter  degrees  in  Ionic  Chapter  and  became  then  a 
Sir  Knight  of  Cyrene  Commandery,  which  elected  him  its  prelate  the 
same  year.  In  the  Scottish  Rite  order  he  has  held,  also,  the  highest 
positions  of  rank,  being  at  the  present  time  commander-in-chief  of 
Rochester  Consistory.  The  Lodge  News  of  Rochester  says  of  him  that 
he  is  "  an  especial  favorite  among  men  and  masons  of  that  city,  and  the 
popular  Rector  of  Trinity  Parish,"  etc.  Rev.  Mr.  HUBBARD  married 
September  9,  1875,  Genevieve  Kenyon,  who  died  in  1881,  leaving  no 
children.     His  father — 

NORMAN  HUBBARD,  eldest  son  of  Richard  Dunning  and  Charlotte 
(Moody)  Hubbard,  was  born  May  14,  1S25,  and  married  Jan  7,  1846,  (1) 
Elise  Brooks — d  Mch  20,  1857 — and  had  Warren  Calhoun  (see  fore- 
going), Richard  Dunning  (b  Apl  12,  1849,  m  Mary  McFall,  and  lives  in 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y.),  and  Arthur  Dudley  (b  Apl  12,  1849,  d  in  Oct,  1S60). 
He  then  m  Feb  9,  1859,  (2)  Mercy  Brooks — d  Jan  20,  1875 — and  had 
Norman,  Jr.  (b  Nov  26,  1859,  attended  school  at  Falley  Seminary,  Ful- 
ton, N.  Y.,  and  at  Bridghampton,  L.  I.,  engaged  in  insurance  business 
at  34  Pine  Street,  N.  Y.,  m  Maroe  Thomas  and  lives  in  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.), 
Eleanor  (b  Mch  27,  1862,  m  Samuel  Coombs,  and  lives  in  Brooklyn,  N. 
Y.),  Edward  (b  Apl  23,  1865,  unm),  Harriet  (b  Dec  28,  1870,  unm),  and 
infant  son  (b  Jan  18,  1875,  d  Jan  20,  1875).  Mr.  HUBBARD  then  m 
Apl  9,  1879,  (3)  Jane  Anderson;  no  children. 


ABRIDGED   LINES  OF  DESCENT. 


75 


DESCENT  LINE  OF  ANNIS  MELINDA  HUBBARD,  ENFIELD, 
GRAFTON  COUNTY,   N.  H. 

George  Hubbard — Mary  Bishop,  John  Hubbard — Mary  Merriam, 
Jonathan  Hubbard — Hannah  Rice,  Jonathan  Hubbard — Rebecca  Brown, 
Jonathan  Hubbard — Abigail  Jennison,  David  Hubbard — Abigail  Lab- 
aree,  Roswell  Hubbard — Sophia  Wilson. 

ANNIS  MELINDA  HUBBARD,  fifth  child  of  Roswell  and  Sophia 
(Wilson)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Charlestown,  N.  H.,  Aug  9,  1819,  and 

now  resides  in  Enfield.  When  her 
father  died  her  mother  kept  the  fam- 
ily together  until  she  was  three  years 
of  age.  Then  placing  the  boys  with 
uncles  and  friends  the  widow  and 
young  child  went  to  live  with  Samuel 
Wilson,  her  brother,  of  Vergennes, 
Vt.,  where  the  mother  taught  school, 
which  ANNIS  attended,  and  also  the 
Chester  Seminary.  Then  all  removed 
to  N.  Y.  City,  where  in  1835  she  wit- 
nessed some  500  business  houses  burn 
down.  Miss  ANNIS  then  returned 
(about  1836)  to  New  England,  and 
since  Dec  26, 1837,  has  lived  in  Enfield, 
where  among  a  community  of  100 
Shakers  she  lives  as  near  as  she  can 
the  life  of  Jesus  Christ.  (Her  mother 
in  the  mean  time  had  married  John 
White  of  Panton,  Yt.)  The  Shakers 
never  marry;  their  lives  are  devoted 
to  doing  noble  deeds,  particularly  in 
caring  for  homeless  children  and  bringing  them  to  worth}'  manhood 
and  womanhood.  Like  the  Quakers,  the  members  are  at  liberty  to  speak 
at  will  in  their  meetings.  Miss  ANNIS  writes:  "  We  live  as  brothers 
and  sisters  in  one  family,  seeking  each  others  good  in  this  home  rela- 
tion. We  are  gathered  at  various  places,  and  it  is  a  daily  study  to  bring 
our  dispositions  to  each  others',  so  there  need  be  no  friction."  Of  her 
brothers — 

SAMUEL  WILSON  HUBBARD,  the  eldest,  was  born  Nov  8,  1867. 
He  removed  to  and  died  in  New  York  City  June  22,  1865,  having  mar- 
ried in  Boston,  Mass.,  about  1830.  He  left  one  daughter,  Sarah 
Elizabeth,  who  m  John  Hunt. 


ANNIS    MELINDA    HUBBARD. 


37t> 


HUBBARD   HISTORY  AXD  GENEALOGY 


JOSIAH  HUMPHREY  HUBBARD,  the  second,  was  born  Dec  8, 
1809,  and  died  of  neuralgia  of  the  heart  in  Framingham,  Mass.,  June  20, 
1875,  where  he  removed  from  Charlestown,  N.  H.,  about  1861,  but  was 
returned  there  for  burial.  At  one  time  he  was  its  postmaster.  He 
married  there  Apl  14,  1839,  Louisa  Brooks,  b  Mch  31,  1819,  dau  Daniel 
Brooks.  Children— Daniel  Brooks  (b  June  29,  1842,  m  Sep  1,  1869, 
Rowena  A.  Tuttle  of  Framingham  and  had  Lyman  /.),  Edward  Ros- 
well  (b  Aug  21,  1844,  m  Oct  2,  1866,  Lucilla  A.  Gibbs  of  Framingham 
and  had  Echuard  Albert)  Josiah  E.  (b  June  n,  1855,  took  upon  his 
mother's  death  the  name  of  Morse  and  rem  to  Odell,  111.)  JOSIAH 
HUMPHREY  HUBBARD  m  the  second  time  in  Framingham,  Mass. 

WILLIAM  HOLDEN  HUBBARD,  the  third,  was  born  Aug  8, 
181 2,  and  was  drowned  in  the  Connecticut  River  in  a  freshet  Apl  14, 
1 86 1,  near  the  mouth  of  Little  Sugar  River.  He  m  Dolly  Griswold  of 
Weathersfield,  Vt,  b  Mch  10,  1810.  Children— Elizabeth  (b  Mch  1, 
1847,  m  Mch  1,  1868,  Hoyt  Benjamin  Lockwood  of  Springfield,  Yt.)  and 
Ellen  (b  abt  1846,  d  at  10  yrs). 

LUMAN  FARNSWORTH  HUBBARD,  the  fourth,  was  born  in 
Claremont,  Sullivan  County,  X.  H.,  Apl  19,  181 5,  m  Mch  15,  1843,  (0 
Caroline  Thompson,  b  at  Crown  Point,  N.  Y.,  Aug  n,  1814,  d  Dec  5, 
1866,  in  Westport,  N.  Y.,  dau  Amos  and  Lucy  (Holmes)  Thompson.  He 
m  Oct  20,  1871,  Lerna  L.  Thompson  of  Whitehall,  N.Y.,  b  Apl  19,  1839, 
dau  James  and  Lerna  (White)  Thompson,  of  Lewis  Co.,  N.  Y.  His 
second  wife  lives  in  Essex  County,  N.  Y. 

DESCENT  LINE  OF  JOSHUA  ROBERTS  HUBBARD,  AND 
DR.  JOSEPH    HUBBARD  OF  BOSTON,  MASS. 

Philip  Hubbard— Mrs.  Elizabeth  (Goodwin)  Emery,  Philip  Hubbard— 
Elizabeth  Roberts,  Joseph  Hubbard— Sarah  Emery,  Joseph  Hubbard— 
Honour  Roberts,  James  Hubbard — Sarah  Tibbetts. 

JOSHUA  ROBERTS  HUBBARD,  second  son  of  James  and  Sarah 
(Tibbetts)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Berwick,  Me.,  Feb  22,  1800.  His  early 
life  was  spent  upon  the  farm,  but  upon  reaching  manhood  his  taste  for 
mechanics  led  him  to  learn  thoroughly  the  machinist's  trade,  and  this 
occupation  he  followed  for  many  years,  or  until  1865,  when  he  entered 
into  the  boot  and  shoe  business,  which  he  carried  on  until  his  death  at 
Great  Falls,  N.  H.,  Dec  29,  1891.  Among  his  business  associates  he  was 
credited  with  great  integrity  and  honesty  of  purpose.  His  habits  were 
very  temperate,  and  all  who  came  in  contact  with  him  were  impressed 
with  his  true  worth  and  uprightness,  which  marked  visibly  the  lives  of 
his  ancestors.  He  married  Aug  15,  1823,  (1)  Mary  Tibbetts,  b  in  Roch- 
ester, N.  H.,  July  28,  1801,  d  in  Great  Falls,  N.  H.,  Mch  6,  1S66,  a  woman 


All  RIDGED  LINES   OF  D  ESC  EXT. 

oil 

of  noble  character  and  noted  for  her  charity  and  kindness  to  all.  She 
was  the  daughter  of  David  and  Mary  (Hubbard)  Tibbetts  of  Berwick. 
Children — George  (b  in  Berwick  Mch  31,  1825,  d  May  16,  1830),  John 
Tibbetts  (b  in  Rochester  Apl  4,  1828,  d  in  Great  Falls,  Apl  3,  1875,  m 
May  15,  1851,  at  Portsmouth,  N.  H.,  Elizabeth  Pray  Emery,  dau  Thomas 
and  Theodosia  Emery  of  Elliott,  Me.,  and  had  Harry  Elmer,  b  Aug  1 1, 
1S60,  at  Great  Falls,  N.  H  ,  and  Fred  Scott,  b  Sep  3,  1869),  Joseph  (see 
following),  Caroline  Frances  (b  in  Great  Falls  Feb  19,  1832,  m  Nov  10, 
1855,  at  Dover,  N.  H.,  George  Woodes:  no  children),  Mary  Elizabeth 
(b  May  12,  1S34),  David  (b  Apl  4,  1836,  d  in  Great  Falls  Sep  6,  1S37), 
Sarah  (b  in  Great  Falls  Nov  29,  1838,  d  in  Dover,  N.  H.,  May  22,  1887), 
and  Clara  Augusta  (b  in  Great  Falls  Apl  25,  1841,  m  May  19,  1866,  at 
Great  Falls,  N.  H.,  Hiram  P.  Murphie).  JOSHUA  ROBERTS  HUB- 
BARD m  July  17,  1866  (2)  Sophia  Libby,  d  at  Rochester,  N.  H.,  Nov  15, 
1890,  dau  William  and  Tamson  Hurd  of  Rochester,  N.  H. 

JOSEPH  HUBBARD,  third  son  of  Joshua  Roberts  and  Mary  (Tib- 
betts) Hubbard,  was  born  in  Rochester,  N.  H.,  Jan  30,  1830,  and  attended 
the  village  and  high  school  at  Great  Falls,  N.  H.,  until  he  reached  the 
age  of  16  years.  Then  he  took  a  course  at  Tilton,  N.  H.,  in  the  New 
Hampshire  Conference  Seminary,  besides  receiving  from  private  tutors, 
until  21  years  of  age,  lessons  in  Chemistry  and  Materia  Medica,  for 
which  he  evinced  a  great  taste  from  his  earliest  years.  He  then  went 
to  Boston,  Mass.,  and  studied  and  practiced  Mechanical  Engineering 
until  1867,  retaining  in  the  meantime  and  developing  his  fondness  for 
Chemistry  and  Materia  Medica.  A  two  years'  course  at  European  insti- 
tutions then  ensued  and  equipped  him  with  abundant  scientific  and 
medical  knowledge  which  in  past  has  enabled  him  to  invent  a  valuable 
compound  known  as  "  Dr.  Hubbard's  Vegetable  Germicide."  This  he 
has  manufactured  since  1S85,  and  it  has  acquired  a  world-renowned 
reputation. 

August  15,  1852,  Dr.  HUBBARD  married  (1)  Ann  Medora  Straw, 
daughter  of  Jeremiah  and  Abigail  Straw,  a  woman  of  goodness,  piety 
and  considerable  beauty.  She  was  born  in  Warren,  N.  H.,  Dec  31,  1831, 
and  died  in  Boston  June  29,  1859.  Children — Metta  Frances  (b  in 
Boston  May  9,  1855,  m  Nov  22,  1893,  John  Marshall  Phillips,  of  Taunton, 
Mass.,  a  large  ship-owner)  and  Alfred  Straw  (b  in  Boston,  Mass.,  May 
18,  1859,  d  Aug  4,  1859,  at  Great  Falls,  N.  H.).  Dr.  JOSEPH  HUB- 
BARD then  married  Oct  31,  1867,  (2)  Helen  Marr  Beaumont,  b  Apl  6, 
1838,  in  Great  Falls,  N.  H.,  d  in  Boston  Mch  14,  1883,  daughter  of  Alex- 
ander and  Mary  (Richer)  Beaumont,  and  granddaughter  of  James 
Beaumont  of  Canton,  Mass.,  with  whom  she  lived  during  her  school 
da  vs.  and  who  was  one  of  the  first  manufacturers  of  woolen  sfoods  in 


!73 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 


this  country.  (See  page  289.)  She  was  a  teacher  in  Boston  schools  for 
15  years.  Children— William  Beek  (b  in  Boston,  Mass.,  Jan  8,  1870,  m 
June  15,  1892,  Carrie  Newton  Haynes,  dau  of  Edward  Bigelow  and  Carrie 
L.  Haynes  of  Athol  Centre,  Mass.). 


DESCENT    LINE    OF    CHARLES    PUTNAM    HUBBARD, 

OMAHA,  NEB. 

George    Hubbard— Mary    Bishop,  John    Hubbard  — Mary  Merriam, 

Jonathan  Hubbard— Hannah  Rice,  Jonathan  Hubbard— Rebecca  Brown, 

Jonathan  Hubbard— Abigail  Jennison,  David  Hubbard— Abigail  Laba- 

ree,  Josiah  Hubbard— Peggy  Allen,  Horace  Hubbard— Marcia  Putnam. 

CHARLES  PUTNAM  HUBBARD,  youngest   son  of  Horace   and 

Marcia  (Putnam)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  North  Charlestown,  N.  H.,  Sep 

2,  1864,  and  graduated 
from  Goddard  Semi- 
nary, Barre,  Vt,  in  1883. 
Hecommencedbusiness 
life  at  Huron,  South  Da- 
kota in  July,  1883,  with 
the  lumber  firm  of  Hub- 
bard Brothers  (Albert 
Allen  and  Robert  Mor- 
ris Hubbard)  in  the  ca- 
pacity of  book-keeper, 
resigning  his  position  in 
December,  1884,  to  take 
that  of  examiner  of  lands 
with  his  brother,  John 
Frank  Hubbard,  Loan 
Agent  at  Atlantic,  Iowa. 
At  this  place  in  1S85  he 
established  a  system  of 
daily  "  County  Reports  " 
for  the  use  of  bankers 
and  business  men,  which 
has  since  been  gener- 
ally adopted  throughout 
the  western  states.  In 
May,  1887,  he  opened  a  farm  loan  agency  at  Broken  Bow,  Neb.,  in  which 
he  is  still  interested.  Always  an  ardent  sportsman,  the  year  1891  was 
passed  in  the  training  and  study  of  hunting  dogs  (setters  and  pointers), 
and  articles  from  his  pen  under  the  nom  de  plume  of  "  Hub  "  appeared 


CHARLES    PUTNAM    HUBBARD,    OMAHA,    NEB. 


ABRIDGED  LINES   OF  DESCENT.  379 

m  many  of  the  leading  sportsmen's  journals.  As  Kennel  Editor  of 
Sports  Afield  of  Denver  in  1892-3  the  results  of  his  previous  careful 
study  of  canine  nature  were  given  to  the  public.  The  severe  drouth  in 
the  West  of  1890  and  1893  set  the  irrigation  movement  afoot  and  in 
March,  1894,  he  was  offered  the  management  of  the  Culbertson  Irrigat- 
ing and  Water  Power  Co.,  with  which  corporation  he  has  since  been 
actively  identified.     His  father — 

HORACE  HUBBARD,  second  son  of  Josiah  and  Peggy  (Allen)  Hub- 
bard, was  born  Mch  20,  1815,  and  died  July  1,  1878,  at  the  old  Hubbard 
homestead  at  North  Charlestown,  N.  H.,  which  he  inherited.  He  mar- 
ried Marcia  Putnam  and  had  Albert  Allen  (b  Nov  17,  1846,  lives  at 
Los  Angeles,  Cab,  m  Olivia  Ferrier  Beatty  at  Atlantic,  Iowa,  and  had 
Clarence  and  Albert),  John  Frank  (b  Nov  24,  185°,  lives  m  Boston, 
Mass  m  at  Springfield,  111.,  Emma  Arnold  and  had  Robert  Arnold), 
Robert  Morris  (b  Julv  29,  1855,  lives  at  San  Diego,  Cab,  m  June  21, 
1886,  at  Chicago,  lib,  Elvira  Barclay  and  had  Horace  and  Frank)  and 
Charles  Putnam  (see  foregoing). 

DESCENT    LINE    OF    ROBERT    HUBBARD,   JOSIAH    MEIGS 
HUBBARD    SARAH  SILL  (HUBBARD)  WILLIAMS,  MARY 
ANNA    (HUBBARD)    BUNCE,    MARTHA     LOUISE     HUB- 
BARD   AND  LUCY  LYMAN  (HUBBARD)   HUBBARD. 
(Paternal    Line)— George    Hubbard— Elizabeth   Watts,    Nathaniel 
Hubbard-Mary    Earle,   John    Hubbard— Elizabeth    Stowe,   Jeremiah 
Hubbard— Elizabeth  Meigs,  Josiah  Meigs  Hubbard-Sarah  Sill  Hubbard. 
(Maternal    Line)— George   Hubbard— Elizabeth   Watts,    Nathaniel 
Hubbard-Mary  Earle,  Nathaniel  Hubbard-Sarah  Johnson,  Nehemiah 
Hubbard— Sarah  Sill,  Elisha   Hubbard— Martha   Roberts,    Sarah    Sill 
Hubbard— Josiah  Meigs  Hubbard. 

ROBERT  HUBBARD  was  born  in  Middletown  April  19,  1831,  and 
in  1852  went  to  California,  where  he  resided  for  four  years  and  then 
returned  to  his  home  in  Middletown.  At  President  Lincoln's  call  for 
600  000  men  in  1862  he  felt  that  the  country  was  upon  the  eve  of  a  civil 
conflict  of  great  magnitude,  and  that  it  was  his  duty  to  enroll  as  one  of 
the  600  000.  He  immediately  enlisted  in  the  14th  Conn.  Infty  and  wrote 
to  his  brother  Josiah,  then  in  Kansas,  telling  of  his  act,  and  entreating 
him  to  come  home  and  care  for  their  aged  parents.  Josiah,  m  the  mean- 
time had  mailed  a  letter  to  him  of  like  import,  and  the  two  communi- 
cations passed  each  other  in  transitu.  ROBERT  HUBBARD  was 
killed  at  the  battle  of  Antietam  Sep  17,  1S62. 

JOSIAH    MEIGS    HUBBARD  was  born   in    Middletown   July    16, 
1832.    In  1856  he  went  to  Kansas  with  the  Beecher  Rifle  Company,  and 


38o 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


was  a  member  of  the  first  Kansas  State  Senate.  In  1862  he  was  im- 
pelled by  the  same  sense  of  duty  his  elder  brother  was,  and  enlisted  in 
the  nth  Kansas  Cavalry,  serving  until  the  close  of  the  war,  when  he 
returned  to  Middletown  and  settled  upon  his  father's  farm,  who,  in  the 
meantime,  had  died.  He  is  in  touch  with  those  who  believe  in  pro- 
gressive farming,  being  a  member  of  the  Board  of  Agriculture  and  a 
trustee  of  the  Storrs  Agricultural  School.  He  has  represented  Middle- 
town  in  the  State  Legislature.  In  July,  1S63,  he  married  Harriet  Fair- 
child,  and  had  Robert  (b  Nov  16,  1867).  Nov  26,  1894,  Mr.  HUBBARD 
m  at  Los  Angeles,  Cal.,  Mrs.  Lavinia  (Bacon)  Coe  of  Pasadena,  Cal., 
formerly  of  Middletown,  Ct. 

vSARAH  SILL  HUBBARD  was  born  October  26,  1834,  and  October 
24,  1856,  married  AVarren  S.  Williams,  who  died  Dec  14, 1894.  Children — 
Mary  Louise  (b  Sep  14,  1861,  d  Sep  12,  1872),  Warren  Josiah  (b  Feb 
24,1866),  Sarah  SiLL(b  Sep  11,1870),  and  Ernest  Hubbard  (b  Sep  6,1875). 

MARY  ANNA  HUBBARD  was  born  in  Middletown  January  3, 
1838,  and  May  17,  1865,  married  James  Hough  Bunce  of  Kensington, 
Ct.,  now  the  leading  dry  goods  merchant  of  Middletown,  and  the  most 
genial  and  popular  citizen  of  the  town.  Mrs.  BUNCE  takes  a  prom- 
inent part  in  all  enterprises  that  are  helpful  to  Christianity  and  hu- 
manity, and  is  a  member  of  the  senior  (Wadsworth)  Chapter  of  the 
Daughters  of  the  American  Revolution  of  Connecticut.  In  1893  she 
was  elected  its  treasurer.  Children — Mary  Emeline  (b  Nov  24,  1866), 
Grace  (b  Sep  2, 1 87 2),  J ames  (b  Dec  3 1, 1 875),  and  Richard  (b  May  11,1881). 

MARTHA  LOUISE  HUBBARD  was  born  in  Middletown  October 
1,  1840,  and  has  never  married.  She  resides  at  the  family  homestead 
situated  at  Johnson's  Lane,  about  three  miles  south  of  Middletown,  and 
is  the  owner  of  a  mountain,  from  the  top  of  which  can  be  seen  so  pic- 
turesque and  enchanting  a  view  that  it  has  been  enumerated  along  with 
the  famous  views  of  Europe  and  the  world. 

LUCY  LYMAN  HUBBARD  was  born  in  Middletown  Jan  15,  1845. 
Feb  27,  1866,  she  married  Nathaniel  Newell  Hubbard  of  Greensburg, 
Ohio.  They  resided  in  Rock  Creek,  Ohio,  until  his  death  in  1868,  and 
then  she  returned  to  Middletown.  Dec  23,  1889,  she  married  Joseph 
Warren  Hubbard  of  Kenilworth,  Ohio,  and  makes  that  place  her  resi- 
dence. Mrs.  HUBBARD,  though  residing  in  the  West,  can  not  be 
weaned  from  her  attachment  for  New  England,  whose  fair  name  she  is 
always  proud  and  anxious  to  defend.  She  is  a  Daughter  of  the  Ameri- 
can Revolution  of  the  Ohio  Chapter,  a  real  Yankee,  and  a  fervent  hater 
of  the  Democratic  party.  One  son  was  born  to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  HUB- 
BARD Jan  29,  1893,  who  died  Feb  1,  1893. 


ABRIDGED  ELVES   OF  DESCENT.  381 

DESCENT  LINE  OF  EDWARD  WARREN  DAY, 
NEW  YORK   CITY. 

George  Hubbard— Elizabeth  Watts,  Joseph  Hubbard— Mary  Porter, 
John  Hubbard— Mary  Phillips,  Nathan  Hubbard— Lydia  Judd,  John 
Hubbard— Hannah  Paine,  Josiah  Hubbard— Eunice  Chapin,  Lewis 
Hubbard— Evaline  Adams,  Harriet  Hubbard— Edward  Parsons  Day. 

FDWARD  WARREN  DAY,  son  of  Edward  Parsons  and  Harriet 
(Hubbard)   Day,  was  born  in  Brooklyn,  N.  Y,  May  2,  1857,  and  was 
educated  in  the  Brooklyn  schools  and,  later,  graduated  in  1875  at  Leroy 
Academy  Leroy,  Genesee  County,  N.  Y,  where  he  lived  his  childhood 
years  with  his  grandparents,  Lewis  and   Evaline  (Adams)   Hubbard. 
Afterward  he  went  to  Rockford,  111,  and  lived  with  his  aunt's  husband, 
Judge  Charles  Works,  learning  there  the  printing  and  newspaper  busi- 
ness&and  eventually  becoming  a  traveling  correspondent,  visiting  nearly 
every  lar-e  city  in  the  United  States.     With  the  exception  of  four  years 
spent  traveling  in  the  West,  he  has  lived  since   1880  in  Washington, 
D  C    being  employed  for  ten  years  in  the  government  service  upon 
the  Staff  of  the  Congressional  Record,  the  United  States  Biennial  Reg- 
ister   and   in   the   compilation   of   the   Rebellion  Records.     In  1887,  he 
superintended  the  compilation  of  the  names  of  140,000  government  em- 
ployes with  incidental  data,  which  embraced  two  volumes.     These  vol- 
umes 'are  called  the  Biennial  Register  or  "  Blue  Book."     He  resigned 
from  the  Interior  Department  April  22,  1889,  to  accept  a  civil  service 
appointment  in  the  War  Department,  from  which  bureau  of  the  govern- 
ment  he  was  retired  June  30,    1894,  with  hundreds  of  others,  by  an 
economical    Democratic   Administration,     He   then  returned   to   New 
York  City  and  gave  his  sole  attention  to  the  interests  of  this  publication. 
While  living  in  Washington  he  became  a  Knight  Templar,  a  Member 
of  the  National  Geographic  Society  (Hon.  Gardiner  Greene  Hubbard 
President)   and  a  member  of  the  Sons  of  the  American  Revolution  and 
of  various  rowing,  athletic,  and  bicycle  clubs.     He  has  devoted  several 
years  to  disentangling  Hubbard  genealogical  threads  that  have  been 
sent  to  him  from  every  quarter  to  be  straightened  out.     He  has  never 
married.     His  mother— 

HARRIET  HUBBARD,  eldest  of  the  six  children  (three  of  whom 
died  young,  leaving  Harriet,  Alfred  Joel  and  Ellen)  of  Lewis .and 
Evaline  (Adams)  Hubbard,  was  born  March  2,  1832,  in  Sandisfield, 
Berkshire  County,  Mass.,  and  removed  «  West "  in  1834  with  her  parents. 
The  family  journeyed  in  primitive  pioneer  style  (there  being  no  rail- 
roads) riding  behind  oxen  and  leading  their  horses  until  they  reached 
Avon  Springs,  N.  Y.  Her  father  did  not  become  suited  with  the  fer- 
tility of  the  soil  there  and  removed  shortly  to   Pavilion,  about  three 


382 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND    GENEALOGY 


miles  south  of  Leroy  and  there  built  himself  a  substantial  log  house. 
In  this  they  lived  several  years  or  until  a  large  frame  one,  with  a  huge 
fire-place,  could  be  constructed.  HARRIET  HUBBARD  attended 
the  district  school  and  finally  graduated  from  the  Lima  Female  College. 
She  married  Dec  25,  1854,  Edward  Parsons  Day,  of  Richmond  Centre, 
N.  Y.,  son  of  Rev.  Warren  Day*  and  Sarah  Kellogg,  who  was  the 
daughter  of  Deacon  Jabez  and  Temperance  (Walton)  Kellogg,  of  Han- 
over, N.  H.  HARRIET  HUBBARD,  an  invalid  for  many  years,  was 
a  resigned,  patient  Christian.  She  was  of  tall  and  stately  presence,  some- 
what reserved,  and  by  many  was  considered  as  beautiful  in  feature  as 
she  was  in  manners.  She  died  of  consumption  in  Leroy,  March  19, 
1 868,  and  was  buried  in  Maplewood  Cemetery  at  Pavilion.  Her  father — 
LEWIS  HUBBARD,  sixth  child  of  the  nine  children  of  Captain 
Josiah  and  Eunice  (Chapin)  Hubbard,  was  born  March  15,  1803,  in  wSan- 
disfield,  Mass.,  and  died  in  Leroy  June  9,  1886.  He  married  March  24, 
1830,  a  descendant  of  the  famous  Adams  family  of  Massachusetts, 
Evaline  Adams,  of  Egremont,  Mass.  (b  Jan  11,  1805,  d  in  Leroy  March 
19,  1872),  and  was  a  prosperous  farmer,  wool -grower  and  horticulturist. 
No  farm  in  his  vicinity  was  better  tilled  or  more  productive,  no  sheep 
compared  with  his,  no  orchards  contained  finer  fruit.  His  100-acre  tract 
yielded  twice  the  revenue  that  his  neighbors'  200  and  300  acre  tracts  did. 
He  was  extremely  industrious,  methodical  and  pious,  and  was  contin- 
ually performing  kind  deeds  for  his  neighbors.  He  could  be  stern  and 
inflexible  though,  if  the  occasion  demanded  it,  to  the  writer's  personal 
knowledge,  whose  young  blood  was  occasionally  set  into  active  circula- 
tion by  him,  just  to  "  get  the  dust  out  of  his  jacket  and  keep  him  from 
the  gallows,"  as  he  tersely  put  it.  He  was  an  exemplary  member  of 
the  Methodist  Episcopal  Church,  which  he  attended  regularly  for  years, 
never  missing  a  Sunday.  Though  horses  were  plentiful  in  the  stables, 
he  considered  it  his  duty  to  walk  to  allow  them  to  rest  upon  the  Sabbath. 
No  matter  how  deep  the  snow  or  how  fiercely  the  March  winds  blew 
he  could  always  be  found  on  the  Lord's  Day  dressed  in  a  black  suit  with 
a  high  old-fashioned  collar  and  a  long-winding  neckcloth  on  listening 
intently  to  the  words  of  the  good  exhorter.  He  was  also  buried  in 
Maplewood  Cemetery  and  his  death  was  deeply  felt  by  his  neighbors. 

*  Kev.  Warren  Day  graduated  from  Dartmouth  College  in  1814  in  the  next  class  after  Daniel 
Webster's,  who  was  his  firm  friend  in  after  as  well  as  in  his  college  life.  In  consequence  of  receiving 
this  college  education  he  agreed  to  forfeit  his  rights  in  his  father's  estates,  which  agreement  his 
father  faithfully  kept.  He  was  the  son  of  Orion  Day  (and  Joanna  Everett)  of  Wrentham,  Mass.,  and 
Sharon,  Vt.,  who  entered  the  Revolutionary  War  at  seventeen  and  was  at  West  I'oint  at  the  time  of 
the  capture  of  Major  Andre,  the  British  spy.  Rev.  Warren  Day  was  the  sixth  in  descent  (through 
Orion,  Ichabod.  John,  John)  from  Knsign  Ralph  Day.  of  Dedham,  Mass.,  who  settled  there  previous 
to  Jan  1,  1645,  and  married  Oct  12,  1647.  at  the  old  Fairbanks  homestead  Susan  Fairbanks,  dau  of  Jon- 
athan and  Grace  Fairbanks,  formerly  of  Sowerby,  Yorkshire,  England.  The  FairbanKs  Homestead  is 
about  the  oldest  one  in  New  England  (the  Craddock  garrison  houseatMedford,  Mass.,  being  possibly  a 
year  older),  and  was  built  in  1636  by  Jonathan,  one  of  the  pioneers  of  Dedham.    (See  Illustration.) 


ABRIDGED   LINES   OE  DESCENT.  2Q, 

DESCENT  LINE  OF  FREDERICK  HUBBARD,  NEW  YORK 
CITY;  ROBERT  JAMES  HUBBARD,  CAZENOVIA,  N.  Y. 
AND  BELA  HUBBARD,  DETROIT,  MICH, 

(Paternal  Line) — George  Hubbard — Mary  Bishop,  Daniel  Hub- 
bard—  Elizabeth  Jordan,  Daniel  Hubbard  —  Elizabeth  Cruttenden, 
Daniel  Hubbard — Diana  Ward,  Bela  Hubbard — Grace  Dunbar  Hill, 
Thomas  Hill  Hubbard — Phebe  Hubbard. 

(Maternal  Line) — George  Hubbard — Elizabeth  Watts,  Joseph  Hub- 
bard— Mary  Porter,  Robert  Hubbard — Abigail  Adkins  Ward,  Robert 
Hubbard — Elizabeth  Sill,  Micah  Hubbard — Content  Guernsey,  Phebe 
Hubbard — Thomas  Hill  Hubbard. 

FREDERICK  HUBBARD,  fourth  child  of  Thomas  Hill  and  Phebe 
(Hubbard)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Hamilton,  Madison  County,  N.  Y., 
June  20,  1 81 7.  He  graduated  at  Hamilton  College,  N.  Y.,  in  1835,  and 
engaged  in  the  business  of  civil  engineering,  holding  the  position  of 
Superintendent  of  Construction  upon  various  sections  of  the  New  York 
and  Erie  Railroad,  and  planning  and  building  many  of  its  bridges.  He 
was  afterward  an  assistant  engineer  upon  the  Michigan  Southern  Road 
and  on  the  Michigan  Central.  He  has  never  married  and  lives  in  New 
York  City. 

ROBERT  JAMES  HUBBARD,  youngest  son  of  Thomas  Hill  and 
Phebe  (Hubbard)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Utica,  N.  Y.,  May  31,  1830,  and 
passed  his  active  business  life  in  New  York  City  until  1876,  when  he 
removed  to  Cazenovia,  N.  Y.,  where  he  yet  resides,  and  of  which  pleas- 
ant village  on  the  shores  of  picturesque  Cazenovia  Lake  he  has  been 
president.  The  town  is  indebted  to  him  for  the  munificent  gift  of  a  fine 
library,  as  well  as  for  other  benefactions.  He  married  Sep  30,  1863, 
Anna  Foster  Burr  (b  in  Cazenovia  May  10,  1837),  daughter  of  Catherine 
(Ten  Eyck)  and  William  M.  Burr.  Children — William  Burr  (b  Aug 
21,  1869,  d  Mch  28,  1S70)  and  Robert  Frederick  (b  May  28,  1876). 

BELA  HUBBARD,  second  son  of  Thomas  Hill  and  Phebe  (Hubbard) 
Hubbard,  was  born  in  Hamilton,  N.  Y.,  April  23,  1814.  He  graduated  at 
Hamilton  College  in  1834,  and  in  the  spring  removed  to  Detroit,  Mich., 
whither  his  eldest  brother,  Henry,  had  preceded  him.  Here  his  first 
attention  was  given  to  the  geology  and  natural  history  of  the  State,  and 
he  was  appointed  assistant  to  Dr.  Houghton,  the  first  State  Geologist. 
He  was  a  member  at  its  organization  of  the  American  Association  of 
Geologists  and  Naturalists.  At  the  conclusion  of  the  State  Survey  he 
studied  law  and  was  admitted  to  the  Bar  in  1S42,  but  gave  his  chief 
attention  to  real  estate.  He  early  interested  himself  in  the  agriculture 
of  his  adopted  State,  and  was  made  Trustee  of  the  Agricultural  Society, 
which  in  1 849  drafted  a  memorial  to  the  legislature,  the  result  being  the 


384  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

State  Agricultural  College  and  Model  Farm.  He  was  also  a  Trustee  of 
the  State  Asylums  for  the  Insane  and  for  the  Deaf  and  Dumb.  He  has 
written  many  scientific,  literary,  and  historical  papers,  and  in  1888  pub- 
lished a  volume  entitled  "  Memorials  of  a  Half  Century  in  Michigan  and 
the  Lake  Regions."  In  1892  he  received  from  his  alma  mater  the  hon- 
orary degree  of  LL.D.  The  Doctor  is  still  residing  in  Detroit.  He 
married  in  1846  Sarah  Baughman  of  Detroit,  daughter  of  Rev.  John  A. 
and  Sarah  (Harvey)  Baughman.  Children — Henry  Guernsey  (see  fol- 
lowing), Collins  Baughman  (see  following),  Thomas  Hill  (b  May  30, 
1855,  d  Jan  24,  1870),  Mary  (b  Oct  9,  1856),  Edward  King  (b  June  12, 
1855,  d  Aug  16,  1879),  Robert  (b  Nov  10,  1857,  d  Aug  16,  1879),  Alice 
(b  Oct  25,  1862)  and  Sarah  (b  Jan  15,  1864). 

HENRY  GUERNSEY  HUBBARD,  eldest  son  of  Bela  and  Sarah 
(Baughman)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Detroit,  Mich.,  May  6,  1850,  and 
graduated  at  Harvard  University  in  1873,  taking  first  honors  in  Natural 
History.  He  made  this  science  the  aim  of  his  life,  his  specialty  being 
entomology.  Receiving  an  appointment  from  the  U.  S.  Department  of 
Agriculture  as  entomologist  to  investigate  the  insects  injurious  to  cot- 
ton, and  subsequently  the  orange,  he  spent  several  years  in  Florida,  and 
prepared  a  voluminous  report  on  the  orange  insects  and  remedies, 
which  the  Department  published  in  1885.  He  also  largely  interested 
himself  in  orange  growing  and  the  experimental  culture  of  semi-tropical 
plants,  and  has  contributed  many  papers  to  the  leading  scientific  jour- 
nals. He  owns  a  large  and  valuable  collection  of  insects.  In  Decem- 
ber, 1887,  he  married  Kate  Lazier,  daughter  of  Frederick  L.  and  Martha 
(Garrison)  Lazier  of  Detroit.  Children — Bela  (b  Aug  13,  1890)  and 
Margeret  (b  June  12,  1892). 

COLLINS  BAUGHMAN  HUBBARD,  second  son  of  Bela  and  Sarah 
(Baughman)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Detroit  Feb  8,  1852,  and  engaged  in 
the  real  estate  and  banking  business,  being  now  President  of  The  Citi- 
zens' Savings  Bank  of  Detroit.  He  was  a  member  of  the  State  Legisla- 
ture in  1 88 1,  and  made  one  of  Detroit's  Police  Commissioners  in  1892, 
which  position  he  still  holds.  He  is  also  largely  interested  in  orange 
growing  in  Florida.  Mr.  HUBBARD  possesses  a  handsome  seal  ring 
that  bears  upon  it  (intaglio)  the  Edward  Hubbard,  Burchanger,  Essex, 
Eng.,  Coat  of  Arms.  His  great  grandfather,  Rev.  Bela  Hubbard,  D.  D., 
brought  the  design  from  England  in  1764.  In  1875  he  married  Ida  M. 
Haigh,  daughter  of  Henry  and  Martha  (Murray)  Haigh  of  Detroit,  who 
bore  him  Frederick  (b  May  20,  1877).  In  1890  he  married  Anna  Geor- 
giana,  daughter  of  Anna  (Elliott)  Knight  and  Hon.  George  Knight, 
covmsel  for  the  Crown  County  Meath,  Ireland.  Children — Edward 
King  (b  in  Aug,  1891)  and  Anna  (b  in  May,  1893). 


ABRIDGED  LINES    OF  DESCENT. 


3*5 


DESCENT  LINE  OF  LUTHER  PRESCOTT   HUBBARD. 
George    Hubbard — Mary    Bishop,   John    Hubbard — Mary    Merriam, 
Jonathan  Hubbard — Hannah  Rice,  Thomas   Hubbard — Mary  Fletcher, 
Nathan    Hubbard — Mary    Patterson,   Thomas    Hubbard — Lois   White, 
Luther  Hubbard — Hannah  Russell. 

LUTHER  PRESCOTT  HUBBARD,  eldest  child  of  Luther  and 
Hannah  (Russell)  Hubbard,  and  eighth  in  descent  from  George  Hub- 
bard of  Guilford,  was  b  in  Hollis,  N. 
H.,  June  30,  1808,  and  d  Sept.  18,  1894, 
in  Greenwich,  Conn.  He  was  86  years 
old,  and  left  a  widow,  Mary  Cummings 
(Tenney )  Hubbard,  and  four  children. 
He  received  his  education  in  the  dis- 
trict school,  and  later  in  Pinkerton 
Academy,  at  Derry.  In  1 824  he  helped 
to  build  the  first  cotton  mill  in  Nashua. 
The  next  year  he  took  up  his  father's 
trade,  that  of  a  stonecutter,  and  was 
first  engaged  at  Quincy,  Mass.,  in 
shaping  the  stones  of  the  Bunker  Hill 
Monument,  and  later  those  of  the 
Quincy  Market  and  the  Tremont 
House,  Boston.  Mr.  HUBBARD  came 
to  New  York  to  live  in  1827,  where 
his  handiwork  can  still  be  seen  in 
Wall  and  Pearl  street  buildings.  He 
afterwards  became  the  confidential 
clerk  in  the  office  of  Ira  Norris  & 
Co.,  granite  dealers.  Mr.  HUBBARD  was  the  first  to  distribute  Bibles. 
in  New  York  for  the  Marine  Bible  Society.  This  was  in  1833.  He  soon 
afterward  took  a  desk  in  the  office  of  the  American  Seamen's  Friend 
Society,  of  which  he  became  financial  agent  in  1863.  He  took  his  family 
to  Greenwich,  Conn.,  and  they  have  been  living  there  ever  since.  For 
forty  years  he  was  the  Secretary  of  the  New  England  Society  of  New 
York  City.  He  was  also  a  warden  of  the  borough  of  Greenwich.  He 
became  famous  for  his  antipathy  to  tobacco,  and  wrote  a  leaflet  on  "  How 
a  Smoker  Got  a  Home,"  of  which  he  printed  and  circulated  over  one 
million  copies,  some  of  them  in  foreign  languages.  He  published  in  1872 
a  partially  complete  genealogical  pamphlet  of  his  particular  branch  of 
the  family,  using  as  a  motto  the  quotation:  "He  who  regards  not  the 
memory  of  his  ancestors  deserves  to  be  forgotten  by  posterity." 

Mr.  HUBBARD  married  Nov.  28,  1832,  (1)  Sarah  Ogden  Johnson,  b 


LUTHER    PRESCOTT    HUBBARD. 

Descended  from  George  Hubbard 

of  Guilford,  Ct. 


386  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

in  Elizabeth,  N.  J.,  Sept.  n,  1812,  d  in  New  York,  Dec.  29,  1840,  dau 
Jonathan  W.  and  Mary  Ann  (Woodruff)  Johnson,  and  had  Theodore 
Frelinghuysen  (b  in  New  York,  March  16,  1834,  d  Dec.  27,  1840),  John 
•Cleaveland  (b  in  New  York  April  20,  1836,  d  Jan.  22, 1841)  and  Luther 
Prescott,  Jr.  (b  in  New  York  Jan.  20,  1840),  m  July  12,  1865,  Hattie  L. 
Knapp,  in  Sing  Sing,  N.  Y.,  and  had  Eddie  Knapp,  b  in  Augusta,  Me., 
June  25,  1866,  din  Sing  Sing  Jan.  14,  1867;  Margaret  Truesdell,  b  in 
Grinnell,  la.,  Feb.  22,  1868;  Willie  Prescott,  b  in  Grinnell,  la.,  Jan.  24, 
187 1,  d  Feb.  26,  187 1,  and  Frederick  A.,  b  in  Minneapolis,  Minn.,  May 
15,  1876.  Luther  Prescott,  Jr.,  is  connected  with  the  famous  Pillsbury 
flouring  mill  at  Minneapolis.  Mr.  HUBBARD  married  Nov.  29,  1848, 
(2)  Mary  Cummings  Tenney,  b  in  Hollis,  N.  H.,  Nov.  9,  1819,  dau  Hon. 
Randolph  E.  and  Phebe  Colburn  (Smith)  Tenney.  Children — Fred- 
erick Augustus,  a  prominent  attorney  both  in  New  York  and  Connecti- 
cut, and  living  in  Greenwich,  was  b  in  Hollis,  N.  H.,  Nov.  17,  1851,  m 
Aug.  1,  1883,  Agnes  H.  Waterbury,  and  had  Carleton  Waterbnry,  b 
April  25,  1884,  and  Drcxcl  Tenney,  b  Aug.  22,  1886;  Mary  Tenney  (bin 
Hollis,  N.  H.,  Oct.  12,  1855,  now  living  in  Greenwich),  John  Theodore 
(b  in  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  2,  1857,  d  in  Minneapolis  Feb.  2,  1882), 
William  Norris  (b  in  Greenwich  Nov.  2,  1865,  a  graduate  of  Williams 
College  1883  and  a  distinguished  physician  in  New  York  City),  and 
Benjamin  Farley  (b  in  Greenwich,  Jan.  20,  1863,  d  there  Aug.  28,  1884). 
Mr.  HUBBARD'S  father  was— 

LUTHER  HUBBARD,  the  fourth  son  of  Thomas  and  Lois  (White) 
Hubbard,  born  Aug.  13,  1782,  died  March  2,  1857,  in  Manchester,  N.  H., 
married  Dec.  18,  1806,  Hannah  Russell,  who  was  born  July  9,  1781,  in 
Westford,  Mass.,  and  died  Dec.  12,  1870.  Their  children  were  Luther 
Prescott  (see  foregoing),  Mary  Ann  (b  in  Hollis,  N.  H.,  Dec.  25,  1809, 

d ,  m  Dec.  22,  1830,  William  Bowers,  of   Dracut,  Mass.,   and  had 

Sarah  Fidelia,  b  in  Nashua,  N.  H.,  May  25,  1832,  d  in  Manhassett,  L.  I., 
Aug.  17,  1867 ;  James  Ornable,  b  in  Hollis,  N.  H.,  Oct.  6,  1833;  Hannah 
Sophia,  b  in  Hollis,  N.  H.,  March  10,  1835;  Caroline  Georgette,  b  in  Mer- 
rimack, N.  H.,  Jan.  14,  1843,  d )>  Hannah  (b  Nov.  9,  1811,  d  May  18, 

1834,  m  Nov.  28,  1831,  James  C.  Channel,  of  Lowell,  Mass.,  and  had 
Hannah  Maria,  b  in  Hollis,  N.  H.,  May  1,  1834,  died  in  Nashua,  N.  H.), 
Thomas  (b  Nov.  20,  1813,  d  July  21,  1815),  Thomas  Russell  (b  Oct.  15, 

1817,  d ,  m  Aug.  24,  1854,  Jane  Elizabeth  Davis,  of  Nashua,  N.  H., 

who  was  b  in  Brownington,  Vt,  Jan.  30,  1826,  and  had  Annie  Grade,  b 
in  Manchester,  N.  H.,  Sept.  22,  1855,  d ;  Jane  Elizabeth,  b  in  Man- 
chester, Aug.  17, 1857,  m Shed),  William  (b  Nov.  3,  1821,  d  1848), 

Sarah  Elizabeth  (b  Oct.  30,  1824,  m  1850  Mr.  Hobart,  of  Randolph, 
Mass.,  and  died  the  same  vear. 


ABRIDGED  LIXES   OF  DESCENT. 


;8; 


(Preceding  ancestors  unknown),  Joseph  Hubbard — Anne  Crews, 
Rhoda  Hubbard — Samuel  Nixon. 

WILLIAM  PENN  NIXON,  youngest  of  the  four  children  of  Samuel 
and  Rhoda  (Hubbard)  Nixon,  was  born  in  Newport  (now  Fountain 
City),  Ind.,  March  19,  1832.  He  graduated  from  an  academy,  taught 
school  two  years,  and  in  1858  graduated  in  law  from  the  University 
of  Pennsylvania,  opening  thereupon  a  law  office  in  Cincinnati,  which 


.  '^k 


■ 


WILLIAM    PENN    NIXON. 


prospered  until  1861,  when  his  wife  (Mary  Stites)  died.  This  bereave- 
ment was  a  deep  one  and  benumbed  his  ambition  for  a  time.  For  many 
months  he  never  entered  his  office.  The  engines  supplying  his  vital 
power  could  not  long  remain  inactive,  however,  and  soon  found  play 
for  his  versatile  ability  in  a  two-term  service  in  the  Ohio  Legislature. 

In  1868  he  embarked  upon  the  rapid  current  of  journalism.  After 
piloting  four  years  the  Cincinnati  Daily  Evening  Chronicle  (consolidated 
eventually  with  the  Cincinnati  Times)  he  anchored  in  1872  in  the  port 
of  Chicago,  a  place  never   less  lively  than  a  South  Sea  simoon  or  a 


388  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

menagerie  at  supper-time.     Mr.  NIXON  grasped  in  exultation  the  situ- 
ation as  he  repeated  over  to  himself  the  words, 

This  is  the  place  I  long  have  sought, 
And  mourned  because  I  found  it  not. 

The  Inter-Ocean  had  a  door  wide  open  for  him.  He  entered  and 
assumed  management.  As  one  tingles  when  an  electric  battery  current 
pervades  him,  so  did  the  Inter-Ocean  begin  to  vibrate  and  scintillate  at 
his  touch.  It  became  a  great  paper.  It  is  a  great  power.  Mr.  NIXON 
is  a  stiff-backed  Republican,  and  is  the  Editor-in-Chief  of  this  great 
plant.  He  owns  the  controlling  interest  that  shapes  the  paper's  daily 
policy.  (His  brother,  Dr.  Oliver  W.  Nixon,  who  married  Louise  Elston, 
owns  also  a  part  interest  in  it,  and  ably  assists  in  its  management). 
Being  one-eighth  Indian,  Mr.  NIXON  has  a  double  right  to  be  called 
Chief  NIXON.     He  is  descended  from  a  Cherokee  Chief. 

About  1740  Joseph  Hubbard,  a  Quaker  preacher,  married  Anne 
Crews,  who  had  a  sister  Susanna.  Both  were  the  daughters  of  a  Chero- 
kee Chief  who  married  in  North  Carolina  a  white  woman.  The  Chero- 
kees  of  North  Carolina  at  that  time  were  wealthy,  powerful,  friendly  to 
the  government,  and  highly  civilized.  Anne  and  Susanna  were  finely 
educated  in  the  Virginia  schools,  where  Anne  met  Joseph  Hubbard. 
They  had  eight  children — Hardy,  Joseph,  Jeremiah,  Woodson,  Jacob, 
Anne,  Susanna  and  Rhoda.  (See  Virginia  Hubbards).  The  sons  were 
known  as  the  "  Five  Big  Cherokee  Boys,"  whose  physical  prowess  made 
them  well  known  locally  and  inspired  much  wholesome  respect.  Rhoda 
married  a  well-known  planter,  Samuel  Nixon,  who  lived  on  the  banks 
of  the  James  River  seventeen  miles  from  Petersburg,  Va.  Joseph 
Hubbard  was  born  in  Mecklenburgh  County,  Va.,  and  lived  to  be  over 
ninety  years.  He  freed  all  his  slaves  when  it  became  to  the  Quakers 
odious  in  principle  to  continue  holding  them.  Anne  (Crews)  Hubbard 
died  in  181 2.  The  father  of  this  Joseph  Hubbard  might  have  borne 
the  name  Joseph  also,  according  to  tradition  that  relates  that  a  Joseph 
Hubbard  came  over  in  1681  with  William  Penn,  though  the  earlier 
Joseph  could  not  have  been  the  one  who  married  Anne  Crews. 

Mr.  NIXON  married  for  his  second  wife  Elizabeth  Duffield  and  has 
children  Mary  Stites,  Bertha  Duffield  and  William  Penn  Nixon,  Jr. 
They  reside  in  Chicago,  111. 


The  world's  a  printing  house;  our  words,  our  thoughts. 

Our  deeds,  are  characters  of  several  sizes; 

Each  soul  is  a  compositor,  of  whose  faults 

The  Levites  are  correctors— Heaven  revises: 

Death  is  the  common  press,  from  whence,  being  driven. 

We're  gathered  sheet  by  sheet  and  bound  for  heaven— -FVawci*  Quarles. 


The  compiler  has  picked  up  motley  scraps  of  Hubbard  data  from  early  colonial  records  so  disas- 
sociated from  genealogical  landmarks  that  he  can  not  properly  classify  them.  It  has  been  thought 
best  to  preserve  this  data,  even  in  a  heterogeneous  form,  rather  than  have  it  lost,  perhaps,  forever. 
Superficially,  a  great  deal  of  this  seems  valueless,  yet  many  descendants  now  investigating  their  pedi- 
grees may  be  able  to  use  these  clues  to  advantage. 

\  considerable  portion  of  what  follows  has  arrived  too  late  for  careful  investigation  or  proper 
classification.  The  compiler's  urgent  requests  have  met  with  varied  results.  S«  >me  have  ignored  them 
entirely  others  have  forwarded  much  that  was  found  to  be  deficient  in  names,  dates,  places,  or  other 
valual .!.-  clues  necessary  for  identification  and  appropriate  arrangement  among  the  different  branches; 
many  more  have  waited  until  the  book  was  nearly  printed  before  forwarding  material:  stiU  more 
have  trusted  to  the  possible  chance  of  others  attending  to  the  matter,  and  will  be.  consequently,  dis- 
appointed to  find  desired  data  missing.  Thousands  of  Hubbards  are  scattered  throughout  thousands 
of  towns,  villages  and  cities.  I  >ne  personcan  not  obtain  such  data  except  by  voluntary  contributions 
The  co-operation  of  many  is  necessary.  This  labor  is  usually  irksome  and  but  few  are  w.l tag _t.> 
trouble  themselves  about  it.  These  things  account  for  the  appearance  of  this  disjointed  data  and  the 
incomplete  statistics  to  be  found  in  some  parts  of  the  context. 

LUCY  Hubbard  m  Samuel  Rockwood  of  Groton,  Mass. 
"  James  Hubbard  died  Mch  17,  1678,  at  Northampton,  Mass. 
Elizabeth  Cowles,  b  1763,  m  -        -  Hubbard  of  Glastonbury,  Conn. 
Sam'l  Hancock  m  1774  Tabitha  Champney  of  Cambridge.     Aug  18, 
1797    after  first  husband's  death,  she  m  John  Hubbard  and  had  one  sen, 
John  H.  (she  d  Dec  19,  1816,  aged  77)  who  went  to  sea  and  d  Dee  ia, 

1819  (?),  aged  20. 

Nathaniel  Otis,  son  of  Richard  Otis,  of  Dover,  N.  11.,  was  born  in 
1684  captured  and  sold  to  the  French  in  Montreal,  Canada,  where  he 
was  re-baptized   and  given  the  name  of   Paul  Hotesse.     He  married 

Elizabeth  Hubbard,  and  had  by  her  seven  children.     She  died  previous 
to  1 72 1,  and  he  December  26,  1730. 
389 


.9o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

David  Hubbard  m  dau  Edmund  and  Joanna  (Hoar)  Quincy. 

June  26,  1693,  Enoch  Hubbard  was  appointed  an  innkeeper  of  Boston. 

Hannah  Hubbard  of  Salisbury,  Mass.,  m  Nov  14,  1679,  Thomas  Eaton. 

Nathaniel  Hebard  [Hubbard?]  was  gaoler  of  Windham  Co.,  Ct.,  in  1777. 

Seth  Cowles,  Winfield,  N.  Y.,  b  1775,111  Esther  Hubbard  of  Leverett, 
Mass. 

December  20,  1676,  mention  is  made  of  an  Isaac  Hubbard  in  the  King 
Philip  War. 

Elna.  Hubbard  enlisted  in  Capt.  Francis  Peabody's  Co.,  in  1759 — 
Essex  Co.  men. 

Isaac ,  b  Jan  28,  1727,  d  Oct,  1809,  m  Hannah  Hubbard  and  set- 
tled in  Western. 

Morant's  History  of  Essex  Count}',  Eng.,  gives  some  historical  facts 
about  the  Hubbards. 

[1674-20-10  mo] — Mr.  Nehemiah  Hubbard  was  ordained  pastor  at 
Cambridge  [Mass.]  Village. 

William,  second  son  Leonard  and  Ruth  (Gale)  Vassall,  m  (1)  Ann 
Davis,  (2)  Margaret  Hubbard. 

Thomas  Hubbard,  "of  Gorsie,"  was  master  of  the  ship  Blossom,  of 
Charlestown,  Mass.,  Aug  26,  1690. 

Moses  Hubbard  [Hobart?]  was  in  the  King  Philip  War  July  24,  1676, 
and  at  the  "Garrison  of  Medfield." 

Joseph  Hubbard  of  Braintree  enlisted  in  David  White's  Co.,  regiment 
of  Col.  Jos.  Williams,  for  campaign  of  1758. 

There  was  a  Mary  Hubbard,  aged  24  years,  who  came  from  England 
in  the  Blessing,  John  Lester,  master,  in  1635. 

Elizabeth  Hubbard  m  June  1,  17 10,  Thomas  Wright,  of  Wethersfield, 
son  of  James  Wright  and  Dorcas  Weed  Wright. 

There  was  an  Edward  Hubbart,  who  was  the  "  Comd'r  of  Barq.  May- 
flower, from  Providence  to  Bermudas  and  Barbadoes." 

February  17,  1634,  Thomas  Hubbard,  aged  20  years,  left  England  in 
the  Hopewell,  Thomas  Wood,  master,  bound  for  Barbadoes. 

Rev.  John  Angier,  of  East  Parish,  Bridgewater,  Mass.,  m  John  Hub- 
bard of  Abington  and  Mary  Allen  of  Bridgewater,  Dec  5,  1756. 

Sarah  Hubbard  m  Francis  Chase,  b  July  4,  1743,  son  of  Francis  and 
Sarah  (Pike)  Chase  of  Newton,  N.  H.,  and  lived  in  Unity,  N.  H. 

There  was  a  John  Hubbard  from  the  First  Society  of  Guilford  who 
went  to  live  in  North  Guilford  before  17 19.  North  Guilford  was  settled 
in  1705. 

April  17,  1635 — William  Hubbard,  aged  35  and  "Jo."  Hubbard,  aged 
10,  imbarqued  on  the  Elizabeth,  William  Stagg,  master,  for  New 
England. 


UNCLA  SSIFIED  DA  TA  A  ND  M ISC  EL  LA  NY  .  n  r 

There  was  a  Marie  Hubbard,  aged  24  years,  who  left  England  Sep- 
tember ir,  1635,  in  the  Hopewell,  Thomas  Babb,  master,  for  New 
England. 

Jonathan  Judd,  d  Mch  10,  1775,  son  of  Jonathan  of  East  Middletown, 
Ct,  settled  in  East  Guilford,  Ct,  and  m  Oct  22,  1740,  Hannah  Hubbard, 
d  Jan,  1757. 

April  13, 1635,  William  Hubbard  aged  35  years,  and  Thomas  Hubbard 
aged  10  years,  left  England  in  the  Elizabeth  and  Ann,  Roger  Cooper, 
master,  for  New  England. 

June  10,  1635,  Samuel  Hubbard,  aged  16  years,  left  Gravesend,  Eng., 
in  the  Truelove,  of  London,  Robert  Dennis,  master,  bound  for  the 
Bermudas  or  Sommer  Islands. 

The  will  of  John  Elyott  (Elliott)  of  Stortford  (Stratford)  parsonage, 
county  of  Hartford,  diocese  of  London,  dated  Oct  22,  1557,  has  for 
witnesses  "  Richard  Hubbert  and  Richard  Pylston."- 

"  Bobbie  "  Burns  had  a  poor  opinion  of  his  ancestors;  he  says:  "  I  have 
not  the  most  distant  pretentions  to  what  the  fye-coated  guardians  of 
escutcheons  call  '  a  gentleman.'  My  ancient  but  ignoble  blood  has 
crept  thro'  scoundrels  ever  since  the  flood!" 

Rachell  Hubbard,  widow  of  John  Hubbard,  mariner,  Mary  Newton, 
widow,  Rachell  (?)  Hassok,  widow,  Margaret  Williams,  widow,  Eliza- 
beth Raven,  and  John  Hubbard,  all  of  Boston,  are  mentioned  in  a  deed 
of  some  property  to  Benjamin  Barnard,  cooper. 

John  Hubbard  was  a  private  in  Captain  David  Henchman's  company 
(composed  of  121  men)  in  the  King  Philip  War.  As  this  company 
operated  principally  in  eastern  Massachusetts,  this  John  may  have  been 
either  the  son  of  Anthony  of  Dedham  or  the  Rev.  William  of  Ipswich. 

Francis  Hubbard's  certificate  of  administration  dated  Boston,  Feb  7, 
1769,  mentions  Rachel  Hubbard,  widow  of  James  Tucker,  wheelwright, 
both  of  Boston.  In  the  settlement  papers  are  mentioned  his  second 
daughter  Mary  Burton,  and  four  other  children.  Mary  Burton  gets  a 
house  and  land  near  Fort  Hill. 

The  Paymaster-General  of  Chancery  in  England,  according  to  the 
London  Times  of  July  4,  1864,  had  in  hand  at  that  time  ^77,693,769, 
awaiting  claimants,  many  of  whom  have  been  kept  out  of  the  enjoy- 
ment of  their  inheritances  because  of  inability  to  prove  their  line  of 
descent.  This  does  not  include  amounts  in  the  Bank  of  England  await- 
ing claimants,  which  is  also  enormous.  In  American  money  the  sum 
amounts  to  over  $380,000,000,  and  is  in  itself  not  an  insignificant  argu- 
ment in  favor  of  keeping  careful  and  accurate  genealogical  records. 
In  Dougal  &  Company's  English  Register  of  heirs  wanted  for  estates 
and  legacies  are  mentioned  16  Hubbards,  Hubbords,  or  Huberts. 


392  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

In  the  New  England  Genealogical  and  Historical  Register,  Vol.  22 
page  28,  appears  a  very  able  article  upon  English  local  nomenclature. 
It  treats  of  the  derivation  of  names  from  their  ethnological  source, 
showing  the  particular  prefixes  and  suffixes  of  different  nations  by 
which  their  origin  is  made  known.     "  Hubbard  "  is  of  Danish  origin. 

Dorcas  Hubbard,  dau  Deacon  John  Hubbard  of  Ellington,  Ct.,  m  (1) 
Samuel  Arnold,  (2)  Noah  Pease,  b  at  Somers,  Ct.,  June  28,  1739,  d  July 
20,  1818  (who  had  m  Mary  Ward  in  1762)  son  of  Robert  and  Elizabeth 
(Emery)  Pease.  Noah  and  Dorcas  (Hubbard-Arnold)  Pease  had  (b  in 
Somers)  Giles,  b  Apl  13,  1763;  Noah,  b  Sep  30,  1765,  d  y;  Hannah,  b 
July  17,  1769,  m  Calvin  Pitkin  of  Somers. 

Almost  all  passengers  who  embarked  from  England  for  St.  Christo- 
phers, or  the  Bermudas  or  Sommer  Islands  (named  after  Sir  George 
Sommers  about  1609)  eventually  arrived  in  New  England.  A  small 
percentage,  however,  remained  there.  Vessels  then  did  not  take  a  direct 
course  across  the  Atlantic,  but  sailed  southwesterly,  touching  at  West 
Indies,  and  then  sailed  northerly  along  the  North  American  coast. 

Since  the  summer  of  1858  the  descendants  of  the  Ipswich  Hubbards 
descended  through  Dr.  John  Hubbard  of  Meriden,  Ct.,  have  met  in 
annual  reunion.  These  meetings  have  usually  been  held  at  Meriden  or 
West  Haven,  Ct.,  and  have  been  productive  of  the  heartiest  good  fel- 
lowship and  family  feeling.  Branches  of  other  Hubbard  families  would 
do  well  to  emulate  these  worthy  efforts  to  keep  alive  fraternal  ties. 

When  Rev.  Bela  Hubbard,  D.  D.,  of  New  Haven,  Ct.,  was  ordained 
in  London  in  1764  the  Bishop  requested  his  name.  He  complied.  Not 
understanding  his  first  name  he  asked  him  to  spell  it.  The  bright 
y«>ung  applicant  for  holy  orders  then  slowly  spelled  it — "  B-E-L-A." 
"  A  very  strange  name,"  remarked  the  Bishop;  "  I  never  heard  it  before!' 
"  Quite  likely,"  replied  the  youthful  cleric;  "it  is  a  scriptural  name." 

Henry  Ainsworth  Parker,  in  the  New  England  Historical  and  Gene- 
alogical Register,  Volume  41,  page  95,  gives  in  an  article  many  reasons 
why  our  ancestors  frequently  made  their  mark  instead  of  signing  their 
names  He  freely  quotes  from  Rev.  S.  R.  Maitlandin  his  "  Dark  Ages," 
who  says  that  there  were  several  reasons  for  this  condition  of  things: 
(1)  Ignorance  of  letters,  (2)  physical  inability  (blindness,  paralysis, 
etc.);  (3)  an  affectation  of  dignity,  which  caused  many  to  require  their 
notaries  to  sign  their  names  for  them.  Dr.  Maitland  mentions  the 
names  of  many  kings  who  indulged  themselves  in  this  whim.  So  it 
need  not  necessarily  follow  that  the  sign  of  the  cross  for  a  signature 
indicated  inability  to  write.  The  compiler  found  evidence  of  this  while 
perusing  old  records  in  a  case  where  sometimes  the  name  was  signed 
and  sometimes  the  cross  used. 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY  7Q, 

The  will  of  Michael  Hubbard,  of  Baltimore,  Md.,  was  probated  in 
Boston,  Mass.,  April  13,  1759.  He  appointed  his  son  Peter  sole  executor, 
and  admonished  him  to  let  his  Uncle  Thomas  of  London,  Eng.,  have 
sums  of  money  from  time  to  time  for  his  necessities.  He  also  bequeathed 
to  his  two  daughters  in  London,  Catherine  and  (?)  Antis  /100  each  per 
annum  "  provided  they  retire  from  the  city  of  London— where  I  suppos  • 
they  now  live— and  afterward  live  in  any  country  town  distant  from 
London." 

In  a  list  of  "Anglais  Captives"  (mostly  children)  taken  in  the  wars 
between  New  France  and  New  England  in  the  18th  century,  there  ap- 
pears the  name  of  one  Joseph  Philip  Ouabird  (Hubbard)  who  at  the  age 
of  17  was  baptized  December  12,  1706,  in  the  Roman  Catholic  Church  at 
Cape  vSt.  Ignatius.  This  partly  accounts  for  the  existence  of  some  Hub- 
bards  in  Canada,  with  the  additional  fact  that  some  Tory  Hubbards  fled 
there  (to  New  Brunswick,  principally),  and  settled  during  the  Revolu- 
tionary War. 

An  extract  taken  from  the  Proceedings  of  the  Royal  Society,  London, 
from  Chambers  Encyclopedia,  reads  as  follows:  "Another  matter  to 
which  the  Society  turned  their  attention  was  the  formation  of  a  museum, 
the  nucleus  being  '  A  Collection  of  Rarities  formerly  belonging  to  Mr. 
Hubbard,'  which,  by  a  resolution  of  Council,  passed  February  21,  1666, 
was  purchased  for  the  sum  of  jT  100.  This  Museum — atone  time  the 
most  famous  in  London — was  presented  to  the  Trustees  of  the  British 
Museum  in  1731,  upon  the  removal  of  the  Society  to  Somerset  House." 

In  the  Middletown  (Ct.)  Riverside  Cemetery  is  the  following  inscrip- 
tion on  the  headstone  of  Mary,  wife  of  Mr.  Nathaniel  Hubbard,  who 
"died  May  20,  1738,  in  the  86th  year  of  his  age."  She  died  April  6, 
1732,  aged  69: 

I  It- re's  a  cedar  tall  gently  wafted  o'er 

From  Great  Brittalns  Isle  to  this  Western  Shore, 

Near  fifty  years  crossing  the  Ocean  wide, 

Yet's  anchored  in  the  grave  from  storm  and  tide. 

Yet  remember  the  body  only  here. 

This  blessed  soul  fixed  in  a  higher  sphere. 


AN  ACCOUNT  OF  THE  BATTLE  OF  BUNKER  HILL. 
The  British  took  possession  of  the  hill  about  5  o'clock,  so  that  the 
heat  of  the  battle  must  have  lasted  about  two  hours.  *  *  *  Daniel 
Hubbard  wore  a  cue,  braided  in  two  strands  down  his  back.  As  he 
passed  by,  Mr.  Craige  saw  him  dodge  his  head,  and  it  was  afterwards 
found  that  a  musket  ball  had  cut  one  of  these  strands  so  close  to  his 
head  as  to  graze  the  skin.  *  *  *  51  years  after  the  battle  (1826)  six 
of  this  company  were  alive;  among  them  Daniel  Hubbard.  He  was 
selectman  from  1S06  to  1810. — History  of  Leicester ;  Mass. 


;94 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


The  English  Parliament  enacted  in  September,  1752,  that  eleven  days 
should  be  dropped  from  that  month  and  thereafter  the  year  should 
begin  with  January  1  instead  of  March  25  (Annunciation  Day),  as  there- 
tofore. This  was  the  abandonment  of  the  old  style  of  chronology  or 
Julian  Calendar  inaugurated  by  Julius  Caesar  45  years  B.  C,  and  the 
adoption  of  the  Gregorian  Calendar,  instituted  by  Pope  Gregory  XIII. 
in  1582  to  absorb  the  surplusage  of  5  hours,  48  minutes,  and  49  seconds 
over  the  year  of  365  days,  which  wise  scientific  innovation  Great  Britain 
refused  to  adopt  then  because  of  its  Catholic  origin.  January  was  then 
called  the  eleventh  month  instead  of  the  first,  and  March  the  first  month 
instead  of  the  third.  This  explains  why  in  this  volume  there  is  an  ad- 
ditional figure  to  the  year  (separated  by  a  hyphen)  in  many  cases. 

A  certain  George  Hubbard,  aged  16,  left  London,  England,  Sep- 
tember 3,  1635,  for  "  Bormodes,"  aboard  the  Dorsset,  John  Flower,  mas- 
ter. He  may  have  continued  to  New  England,  or  he  may  have  been  the 
one  who  with  a  John  Hubbard,  were  in  the  list  of  "  The  names  of  ye 
Govern'  &  Councill  of  ye  Assembly  of  ye  Sommer  Islands."  The  fol- 
lowing is  an  extract  from  the  official  records  of  the  "  Somer  Islands 
Company:"  "An  accompt  of  the  Generall  Lands  belonging  to  the 
Somer  Islands  Compa,  taken  out  Mr.  Richard  Norwood's  Survey  booke: 
by  him  made  in  the  yeares  1662,  1663:     The  Lands  in  S.  Davids  Island 

given  by  ye  honoble  Company  to  Harrington  als  Hamilton  tribe 

Mary  Mountaine,  aforesd  holdeth,  as  belonging  to  two  Shares  in  Ham- 
ilton tribe,  being  the  Shares  of  Capt.  George  Hubbart,  of  Devonsheir 
tribe  (No.  12) —a  pell  cont.  p.  est 10  acr:" 

"  Islands  in  Comon: No.  1.    The  Bigger  Island  at  ye  bottome 

of  ye  Little  Sound  against  ye  Lands  of  m'  John  Hubbart,  cont.  p. 
estimat 1  acr,  2  roo,  20  per." 


AN  OLD  BOSTON  TOMBSTONE. 

*    *    *    lyes  interred  ye  body  of 

Mary  Tuthill,  relict  of  John  Tuthill, 

aged  67  years,  who  departed  this  life 

September  ye  19th,  1705. 

Here  lyeth  interr'd  ye  body  of 

Deacon  Thomas  Ilubbart  who 

departed  this  life  ye  17th  day  of 

1717 

November  in  ye  64th  year  of  his  age 

Here  lyes  interred  ye  body  of  Mrs.  Mary 

Hubbart    *    *    *    of  Deacon  Thomas  Hubbart 

*    *    *    departed  this  life  Auguste    *    *    * 

anno  domini  1720  in 

*    *    *    year  of  her    *    *    * 

Here  lyes  interred  ye    *    *    *    of  Zechariah  Tuthill 

his    *    *    * 

here    *    *    * 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY. 


395 


AN  OLD  HUBBARD  CHEST. 

This  antique  relic  of  olden  times  was  made  across  the  broad  Atlantic, 
and  confronts  us  to-day  in  a  very  sound  state  of  preservation.  It 
is  of  oak,  about  four  feet  high  and  two  feet  deep,  with  a  crude  scroll- 
work embellishing  the  outside  front,  or  panels.     It  was  constructed  with 

rather  clumsy  imple- 
ments, the  back  of  it 
appearing  to  have 
been  roughly  hewn 
out  with  an  axe.  The 
wood,  except  the  pan- 
els, is  very  thick — 
about  2  inches — and 
is  held  together  with 
wooden  pegs, the  fore- 
runners of  the  iron 
nail.  This  chest  was 
doubtless  kept  to  store 
linen  in,  and  has  never 
been  out  of  the  fam- 
ily's possession  since 
it  was  brought  over 
from  England  by 
George  Hubbard,  in 
1633,  to  Guilford,  Ct. 
MARY  LINSLEY 
HUBBARD,  now  liv- 
ing on  the  old  George 
Hubbard  building- 
site  in  Guilford,  is  the  fortunate  possessor  of  this  valuable  heirloom. 
She  inherited  it  from  her  aunts  Anne  and  Betsy  Hubbard,  and  will 
take  good  care  that  it  falls  into  appreciative  hands  at  her  demise.  It 
was  earnestly  sought  after  to  exhibit  at  the  World's  Fair;  but  knowing 
that  money  could  not  replace  it  if  it  was  destroyed  by  fire  or  railway 
wreck  she  wisely  retained  it.  What  a  chapter  of  rich  historic  inci- 
dents might  it  not  relate  had  it  only  the  power  of  language,  and  how 
many  vexed  genealogical  tangles  could  it  not  unweave,  is  left  to  the 
reader  to  conjecture.  It  has  excited  considerable  interest  among  anti- 
quarians. It  formerly  opened  at  the  top,  but  Miss  HUBBARD  had  it 
altered  so  that  the  two  front  panels  were  converted  into  doors  which 
swing  open  like  those  of  a  cupboard.  A  shelf  was  also  inserted.  These 
alterations  made  it  far  more  convenient  for  use. 


OLD    HUBBARD    CHEST. 


;96 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 


A  PLEASANT  SEAT  OF  LEARNING. 
Hobart  College,  situated  at  the  'foot  of  Seneca  Lake,  in  the  pretty 
town  of  Geneva,  N.  Y.,  was  founded  through  the  active  instrumentality 
of  the  Right  Rev.  John  Henry  Hobart,  D.D.,  Bishop  of  New  York,  who 
descended  from  Edmund  Hobart  of  Hingham,  Mass.,  who  emigrated 
from  Norfolk,  England,  in  1633.  The  Annual  Catalogue  of  Hobart 
College  reads:  "In  1818  Bishop  Hobart  recognizing  the  importance,  if 
not  necessity,  of  having  in  the  western  portion  of  his  great  diocese  a 
school  of  liberal  culture,  as  well  as  a  theological  school,  communicated 
to  friends  in  Geneva  his  plan  to  transfer  the  Theological  School  from 
Fairfield  to  Geneva.  In  182 1  the  transfer  was  made.  In  1826  the  first 
class  was  graduated.  Of  the  earlier  additions  to  the  permanent  re- 
sources of  the  college,  a  noteworthy  one  was  the  benefaction,  in  185 1,  of 
Trinity  Church,  N.  Y.,  amounting  to  $3,000  annually.  One  of  the  results 
of  this  benefaction  was  the  change  in  the  following  year  of  the  corporate 
title  of  the  College  to  Hobart  Free  College,  which  was  further  modified 
in  i860  to  Hobart  College."  Bishop  Hobart  founded  in  1825  the  Charles 
Startin  Professorship.  The  Hobart  Professorship  was  founded  in  1852 
by  gifts  from  friends  of  the  College.  Though  Hobart  College  is  not 
large  in  point  of  numbers,  it  ranks  with  the  highest  of  its  class  for 
superior  theological  training. 

CAPABILITIES  OF  A  HUBBARD  HORSE. 
New  Brunswick,  N.J.,Jan.  11,  1895. — Ben,  a  faithful  old  horse  who 
has  done  various  kinds  of  duty  for  Liveryman  John  V.  Hubbard  of  this 
city,  saved  his  owner  considerable  loss  at  2  o'clock  this  morning  when  a 
fire  broke  out  in  Mr.  Hubbard's  private  office.  Ben  occupied  an  open 
stall  about  fifty  feet  from  Mr.  Hubbard's  office.  The  horse  is  always 
quiet,  but  he  must  have  scented  danger,  for  he  broke  away  from  his 
halter,  backed  out  of  the  stall  and  ran  150  feet  through  the  corridor  of 
the  stable  to  the  rear  office,  where  slept  George  Witt,  the  night  man. 
The  door  of  this  office  was  closed.  The  first  thing  Witt  knew  the  horse 
was  standing  over  him  and  he  was  lying  on  the  floor.  Witt  had  all  his 
clothes  on,  and  Ben  had  taken  a  firm  hold  at  his  waist  and  lifted  him  off 
his  couch.  He  might  have  carried  him  out  of  the  door,  but  the  office 
was  too  small  to  move  around.  Witt  was  dumbfounded  until  he  smelled 
smoke.  Then  he  led  the  horse  out  of  the  rear  office  and  Ben  trotted 
along  with  him  to  Mr.  Hubbard's  office,  where  there  was  a  lively  blaze. 
Neighbors  were  warned  and  the  fire  was  soon  checked.  A  rug  had 
taken  fire  from  the  stove.  Mr.  Hubbard  says  he  would  not  part  with 
Ben  at  any  price.  He  considers  that  the  intelligent  horse  saved  him 
his  thirty  horses  and  carriages,  valued  at  $15,000  — \  Tew  York  Sun. 


TWENTY    FIVE    HUBBARDS. 


;98 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


VERSIONS  OF  THE  ORIGIN  OF  THE    NAME    HUBBARD  AS 
FURNISHED  BY  CORRESPONDENTS. 

In  the  Welsh  language  Hub  means  "  non  "  or  "without,"  and  therefore 
Hubbard  is  non-poetical,  or  without  poetry — in  other  words,  practical. 

It  came  from  "  Hopyard."  An  Indian  woman  in  remote  times  gave 
birth  to  a  child  in  this  field  of  viniculture  and  called  him  "Hopyard," 
from  which  the  name  "  Hubbard"  was  derived.  [This  is  a  most  absurd 
account]. 

A  History  of  Christian  Names  says,  according  to  a  correspondent, 
that  William  Arthur,  M.A.,  records  the  belief  that  Hobart,  Hibbard, 
Hubert  and  Hubbard  are  synonyms,  and  mean  "bright  form,  fair  hope." 
In  Saxon,  hiewe — color,  form,  beauty;  sometimes  beort,  bright.  [This 
account,  strictly  speaking,  scarcely  defines  its  origin. \ 

Hugibert,  or  bright  mind,  belonged  to  the  Bishop  of  Liege,  to  whom 
attached  the  Teutonic  story  of  the  hunter's  conversion  by  the  cross, — 
bearing  stag,  making  him  the  patron  of  hunters  and  his  name  very  pop- 
ular in  France,  Flanders,  Northern  Italy  and  probably  once  in  England. 
Since  it  has  left  its  the  two  names  became  "  Hubbard"  and  "  Hobart."  It 
used  to  be  wrongly  translated  "bright  of  hue." 

Some  think  the  word  "  Bard  "  was  the  root  and  the  prefix  "  Hub  "  an 
after  thought.  There  are  people  living  named  Obard  and  Obbard  who 
have  claimed  kinship  to  Hubbards  on  the  strength  of  the  word  "  Bard." 
"Bard  "is  of  Celtic  origin  and  one  tradition  says  it  originated  among 
the  Druids  in  Wales.  It  was  often  spelled  Barde,  Bardd,  Barz  and 
Bardigan.  Bards  were  originally  composers  of  poetry  who  sang  their 
compositions  about  heroes  and  princes  in  accompaniment  to  stringed 
musical  instruments.  [There  may  be  a  grain  of  truth  in  this  version,  in 
so  far  as  it  relates  to  the  word  "  bard  "J. 

A  New  York  gentleman,  a  linguist,  gives  the  origin  of  the  name 
Hubbard  among  the  Indians  as  meaning  "a  man  in  a  canoe,"  which 
may  account  somewhat  for  the  following  interesting  tradition  among 
the  Delawares,  who  were  part  of  the  Cherokee  nation.  They  believe 
that  every  one  has  a  guardian  spirit,  which  comes  in  the  form  of  some 
bird  or  animal  in  dreams,  and  tells  them  what  to  do  and  what  will  hap- 
pen. The  guardian  spirit  is  sent  from  the  Great  Spirit.  Ten  years 
before  white  men  came  to  America  a  young  man  told  his  dream  in  the 
temple  when  the  Delawares  lived  on  the  Atlantic  coast.  He  saw  com- 
ing across  the  great  waters  a  large  canoe  with  pinions  (wings)  and  con- 
taining strange  people.  He  told  this  dream  and  predicted  the  arrival 
of  the  white  men  each  year  until  they  came  and  were  seen  by  his  peo- 
ple. Consequently,  any  white  man  seen  approaching  in  a  canoe  was  a 
"  Hubbard." 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY. 


,99 


THE  PEACE  ASSOCIATION  OF  FRIENDS  IN  AMERICA. 
This  society,  which  has  for  its  motto:  "Put  up  your  sword— Love 
your  enemies;-  is  presided  over  by  WILLIAM  GILMER  HUBBARD  of 

Columbus,  ( )hio.     It  was 
organized  in  1868  and  in- 
c<  >rp<  (rated  in  1 894.  Daniel 
Hill  is  its  General  Secre- 
tary; Samuel  C.  Mills,  Re- 
cording   Secretary;    and 
John   Kendall,  Treasurer. 
Including  the  foregoing, 
are  the  following   Direc- 
tors:   Allen    Jay,    A.    H. 
Hussey, Dr.  J.  E.  Rhoades, 
Hannah  J .  Bailey,  Richard 
H.  Thomas,  Joseph    Ar- 
nold,  John    F.    Harrison 
and  Naomi  W.  Harrison. 
As   is  well  known,  the 
members   of  this   society 
are  opposed  to  war  with 
its  bloodshed  and  desola- 
tion, and  manage  to  live 
at  peace  among  them- 
selves   and    with    their 
neighbors  without  invok- 
ing its  aid  to  enforce  their 
rights.    Their  persecution 
in  Old  and  New  England 
in    early    days    is    well 
known  to  the  student  of  history.     Where  they  were  once  treated  with 
ignominy  and  reproach  they  are  now  revered  and  held  up  as  bright  ex- 
amples  of  morality  and  inflexible  honor.     A  number  of  them  came  from 
the  South  principally  Virginia  and  North  Carolina,  from  where  they 
were  driven  by  the  Slaveholders,  though  previous  to  ,688  they  owned 
a  es    throughout    the   Atlantic    States.     Then    an   agitation   began 
which   lasted' for   forty    years.     After  ,?28  no   man   was  allowed .* 
remain   a  member  of   the   Friends'  Church  who  would  not     testify 
against    it"      John    Hubbard,   the   father    ot    Mr.    HIBBARD,   the 
Sen    of  ttis  society,  was  one  of  those  who  were  compelled  to 
leai*    North  Carolina   about    ,844  because  of  his   anu-slavery  views. 
(See  page  81.) 


WILLIAM    GILMER    HUBBARD 


4QO 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


DANIEL  HUBBARD'S  MARRIAGE  PROPOSAL  TO 
MISS  COIT. 
"  To  Mr  Jhon  Coit,  att  New  London: 

Honoured  Sir  &  Madm:  I  blush  &  tremble  on  my  knees  while 
I  study  how  to  approach  your  Presence  to  ask  of  you  a  Blessing  for 
which  I  have  long  addressed  ye  Skies.  From  my  first  Acquaintance  at 
your  House  I  have  wish'd  my  Happiness  thence.  Nor  have  I  yet  found 
it  in  my  Power  to  seek  it  from  an  Other.  My  careful  Thoughts  with 
Ceaseless  Ardors  commend  ye  Affair  to  that  Being  who  alone  inspires 
a  pure  &  refined  Love.  The  Eye-Lids  of  ye  Morning  discover  me  in 
secret  Places,  with  my  first  Devotions  solliciting  ye  dear  important 
Cause;  and  ye  Evening-Shades  are  conscious  to  ye  Vows  I  mak  for  ye 
fr  Creature  who,  next  to  Heaven  holds  the  Empire  of  my  Heart.  And 
now  while  I  write  I  pray  ye  great  Master  of  Souls  to  incline  yours  to 
favour  my  Address.  By  ye  Love  of  God  I  beseech  you,  ye  happy  Par- 
ents of  my  Partner  Soul.  But  I  forbare  till  I  may  be  honoured  with  ye 
Opportunity  of  a  personal  Application.  In  ye  mean  time  I  consecrate 
my  best  Wishes  To  ye  Interests  of  yr  Family,  &  with  ye  higest  Respect 
subscribe  my  Self,  Sir  and  Madam,  yr  most  devoted,  most  humble 
Servant, 

Stonington,  Decmbr,  1730.         D.HUBBARD. 

THE  SALEM  WITCHCRAFT. 
ELIZABETH  HUBBARD,  born  about  1647,  lived  with  her  aunt, 
Mrs.  Dr.  Griggs,  at  Salem  Village,  Mass.  About  1690  she,  with  other 
young  ladies,  whose  ages  ranged  from  ten  to  twenty  years,  used  to  visit 
their  pastor's  residence  (Rev.  Mr.  Parris's)  to  practice  in  a  social  way 
fortune-telling,  necromancy,  palmistry  and  magic.  Among  these  young 
ladies  was  the  minister's  daughter.  Soon  they  became  quite  expert, 
and  their  performance  elicited  much  wonderment,  and  to  many  were 
construed  as  emanating  from  an  evil  source.  In  the  history  of  Salem 
Witchcraft  by  Charles  W,  Upham  it  is  claimed  that  this  was  the  begin- 
ning of  the  famous  tidal  wave  of  persecution  which  has  so  badly  stained 
the  fair  character  of  New  England's  body  politic.  In  the  deposition  of 
Ezekiel  Cheevers,  taken  before  the  magistrates  of  Salem  Village  in 
March,  169 1-2,  at  the  trial  of  Sarah  Good,  Sarah  Osburn  and  Tituba,  the 
Indian  woman,  for  witchcraft,  the  following  remarks  appear  of  record: 

Mr.  Ezekiel  Cheevers  affirmed  to  ye  jury  that  he  saw  Martha,  wife  to  Giles  Cory,  examined  before 
ye  magistrates.  At  which  time  he  observed  the  ye,  s'd  Cory,  sometimes  did  bite  her  lip:  and  when 
she  bit  her  lip,  mercy  Lewis  and  Elizabeth  Hubbard  and  others  of  ye  afflicted  persons  were  bitten; 
also  when  s'd  Cory  pinched  her  fingers  together,  then  mercy  lewise,  Elizabeth  Hubbard,  and  others 
were  pinched  and  according  to  ye  motions  of  s'd  Martha  Coryes  body,  so  were  ye  afflicted  persons 
afflicted.  This  he  affirmed  to  be  true,  according  to  ye  best  of  his  observations.  Mr.  Edward  Putnam 
affirmed  ye  same  to  ye  jury  of  inquest  that  Mr.  Cheevers  doth;  Mr.  Thomas  Putnam  affirmed  ye  same, 
all  upon  oaths,  all  of  them. 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AXD  MISCELLANY.         4oi 

EXTRACTS  FROM  LETTERS  WRITTEN  TO  HARLAN  PAGE 
HUBBARD  BY  EDWIN  AND  DOUGLAS  HUBBARD. 

Chicago,  March  i,  1878. — I  have  been  collecting  memoranda  for  more 
than  forty  years  and  have  hoped  some  time  to  publish  a  book — the  hard 
times  make  it  doubtful  as  to  when.     *    *    * 

Chicago,  October  21, 1S82. — I  have  always  cherished  the  hope  that  I 
might  some  time  secure  a  patron  who  had  the  means  and  disposition  to 
employ  me  to  arrange  for  the  publication  of  my  Memoranda  of  the 
Hubbard  Family,  now  in  my  possession  and  in  my  reach.  In  the  past 
forty  years  I  think  I  have  obtained  memoranda  of  some  200  individual 
Hubbard  families,  more  or  less  complete.  /  hare  never  dared  to  attempt 
to  arrange  them.     I  will  submit  the  following  proposition.     *     *     * 


(0((t^(Al   'dCiivkc*  \  <:(_ 


New  York,  June 30,  1883. — Your  favor  handed  me  by  Mr.  Richard 
Hubbard  I  very  gratefully  acknowledge,  for  it  has  been  of  material 
benefit  to  me.  *  *  *  I  am  now  at  the  "  Home  "  on  Hudson  Street, 
and  shall  continue  to  make  "collections of  the  Hubbards"  corresponding 
with  all  I  hear  of,  and  endeavor  to  "connect"  them  with  their  original 
ancestor,  writing  out  sketches  for  such  as  are  willing  to  recompense  me. 
*  *  *  I  intend  eventually  to  put  all  this  matter  in  such  shape  and 
situation  that  it  will  not  be  lost.     *     *     * 


*£rz^-t<~</£<*^7    ^C-c~^r^&^-v/ 1 


A  TRIBUTE  TO  GENIUS. 
FRANCIS  SALTUS  SALTUS,  son  of  Francis  H.  and  Julia  (Hub- 
bard) Saltus,  was  born  in  Waverly  Place,  New  York  City,  Nov.  23,  1849, 
and  died  in  June,  1889.  He  was  a  born  poet,  a  phenomenal  linguist, 
and  a  master  of  harmony  and  music.  The  poems  published  since  his 
death  are  The  Witch  of  Endor,  Dreams  After  Sunset,  Flasks  and 
Flagons,  and  Shadows  and  Ideals.  Many  of  his  dramas,  memoirs, 
poems,  comic  operas  and  musical  gems  yet  remain  unpublished.  He 
was  an  extensive  traveler  about  the  world,  and  passed  many  years  in 
the  realm  of  arts  in  Southern  Europe,  acquiring  while  then'  a  mastery 
of  twenty-three  languages,  besides  dialects.  This  gifted  person's  physi- 
cal temple  appeared  to  the  eye  to  be  a  most  fitting  repository  for  the 
cultivation  of  belles-lettres  and  the  finest  arts.  He  was  the  perfect  bean 
ideal  of  artistic  beauty  and  grace,  so  much  so  that  Cabanel,  the  famous 


402  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

artist,  once  followed  him,  being  much  struck  with  his  appearance,  and 
begged  the  privilege  of  painting  him.  Afterwards  in  referring  to  him 
he  said:  "His  is  the  most  perfect  ideal  Greek  head  and  face  I  have 
ever  seen,  and  if  he  will  allow  me  to  paint  a  portrait  of  him  for  myself 
I  will  duplicate  it  for  him."  At  the  age  of  ten  he  was  a  skilled  pianist. 
His  musical  talent  he  inherited  from  his  mother,  Julia  Hubbard. 
Godey's  Magazine  for  June,  1893,  says  of  her — "so  wonderful  were  her 
musical  accomplishments,  so  celestial  her  voice,  that  entranced  crowds 
used  to  gather  in  Washington  Square  on  summer  evenings  to  catch 
through  the  open  windows  of  her  father's  residence  the  heavenly  strains 
of  her  singing.  Her  father,  Mr.  Hubbard,  was  music  mad,  and 
gathered  about  him  all  the  noted  singers  of  the  day.  Although  of 
independent  wealth  and  exalted  social  position  he  was  frequently  ap- 
proached by  operatic  managers  with  offers  of  engagements  for  his 
daughter.  Marti,  Manager  of  the  Tacon  Opera  House,  Havana,  in 
1848,  offered  him  in  his  zeal  $1,000  per  night  for  fifty  performances. 
These  overtures  were  graciously  but  firmly  declined." 

FRANCIS  SALTUS  SALTUS  had  a  severe  attack  of  typhoid  fever 
while  in  Paris  in  1874,  which  undermined  his  health  and  gradually 
brought  his  brilliant  and  phenomenal  career  to  a  close.     The  following 

poem  to  Marie ,  a  lovely  French  girl,  was  the  immortalization  of 

the  holiness  of  his  passion  for  her.  Her  death  was  untimely,  and  but  a 
few  months  before  their  appointed  marriage  day.  Other  poems  were 
consecrated  to  her,  notably  "  My  Faith  "  and  "A  Farewell."  The  latter 
he  wrote  just  before  leaving  her  for  a  second  trip  around  the  world. 
It  was  the  voice  of  "  Love's  sweet  misery."  He  was  buried  in  historic 
Sleepy  Hollow  at  Tarrytown-on-the- Hudson,  a  fitting  place  for  the  clay 
of  genius  to  forever  repose. 

PAX   ET  PURITAS. 

When'er  my  sad  gaze  lingers  in  thine  eyes, 
That  glow  with  all  the  idyllic  warmth  of  Greece, 
I  find  from  care  a  lovable  release — 
My  heart  throbs  warmer  in  a  charmed  surprise. 

Floods  of  fancy  awake,  and  I  surmise. 
While  subtle  pleasures,  vaguely  known,  increase, 
That  the  calm  spirit  of  delicious  Peace, 
Candid  and  beautiful,  within  them  lies. 

Then  as  I  look  again,  with  whims  and  dreams. 

Another  shape  appears  in  stainless  white, 

Smiling  upon  me  radiant  and  fair; 

And  to  my  rapt  and  ravished  mind,  it  seems 

As  if  sweet  Purity,  in  robes  of  light. 

Had  come  to  take  eternal  refuge  there. 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY.  4q3 

IMPORTED  HUBBARDS. 

FREDERICK  CHARLES  HUBBARD,  his  mother,  and  sister 
Laura,  now  Mrs.  William  J.  Patton,  Albany,  N.  Y.,  came  from  New- 
market, Suffolk,  England,  and  settled  in  the  United  States.  He  was  a 
soldier  in  the  late  civil  war,  and  left  a  daughter,  Eurilla  E.  Hubbard, 
now  of  Paterson,  N.  J. 

JOHN  HUBBARD,  born  in  London,  England,  came  to  America  and 
settled  in  Prince  George  County,  Va.     He  married  about  1820  and  had 

William,  Ann  Elizabeth  (m Whitney,  of  Richmond,  Va.)  and 

John  T.  Hubbard,  of  Petersburg,  Va.,  whose  children  are  Mary  J/., 
Nannie  O.,john  II,  Charles  L.,Anu  E.,  William  T.,  Nelia  F.,  Christo- 
pher B.,  and  Vernon  R. 

Members  of  the  great  "  Hubbard  "  Family  are  scattered  over  the 
world.  Some  of  them  are  located  in  India.  ISAAC  HUBBARD,  son 
of  Isaac  and  Elizabeth  (Gardiner)  Hubbard  of  Great  Bentley,  Essex, 
Eng.,  was  in  the  Bengal  Foot  Artillery  at  Fort  William  Huttyghur, 
East  India,  November  12,  1818.  He  had  children  Matilda  and  William 
Henry  Hubbard— also  brothers  WILLIAM  and  THOMAS.  WILLIAM 
was  an  extensive  florist  in  Colchester,  Essex,  Eng.,  while  THOMAS 
joined  the  British  Navy  and  subsequently  the  Revenue  Marine  Service. 
In  the  North  Sea,  aboard  the  cutter  "  Ranger,"  he  was  wounded  in  a 
fight  with  smugglers,  which  caused  his  retirement  from  British  service, 
though  as  an  owner  of  vessels  trading  between  Great  Yarmouth  and 
Baltic  and  Mediterranean  ports  he  continued  a  seafaring  life.  While 
commanding  one  of  his  ships  he  was  drowned  in  a  gale  in  Yarmouth 
Roads  with  one  of  his  sons.  He  married  Elizabeth  Warren  and  had 
Thomas,  James,  Ann,  Margaret,  and  Isaac  Gardiner  Hubbard.  The 
latter  was  born  August  18,  181 8,  at  Great  Yarmouth,  Eng.,  married 
Rebecca  Penny  (the  only  daughter  of  Captain  Joseph  Penny  of  the 
British  Navy),  and  came  to  the  United  States  in  1845  with  his  wife  and 
infant  son  to  reside.  This  son,  Isaac  Penny  Hubbard,  the  only  child,  was 
born  December  3,  1844,  in  Great  Yarmouth,  and  educated  in  New  York 
City  schools.  He  served  in  the  late  civil  war  in  Co.  "  K,"  37th  New  . 
York  Volunteers,  and  is  a  member  of  James  C.  Rice  Post  No.  29,  G.  A. 
R.,  and  a  practicing  lawyer  in  New  York  City,  having  been  admitted 
to  the  bar  there  in  1867.  He  has  the  care  of  several  large  estates,  and 
has  won  cases  in  several  will  contests.  He  married  Harriet  Armstrong, 
daughter  of  William  and  Maria  (Benney)  Armstrong  of  New  York. 
Children  —  Franklin  Armstrong  (b  Aug  10,  1884),  Edith  Rebecca  (b 
June  11,  1887),  William  Pesoa  (b  July  27,  1890)  and  Gardiner  Benney 
Hubbard  (b  May  22,  1892). 


(7?.  B^^cA^cyiJy-   ^#^^&r^ 


S?eJ^ 


/Yz^Z-A^^ 


'--: — ) 


(u^'py^o^^-^  ^r~ 


<0<- 


'fycuinu^  P. 


7\Ax^> — ■££*&c^t-z.-[ 


A    PAGE    OF    HUBBARD     AUTOGRAPHS. 

(A  "quirl"  to  the  final  "d  "  is  visible  in  most  of  these  signatures.    Is  it  a  sign  of  heredity) 
404 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY.  405 


A  WORLD  FAMOUS  HOOK. 
In  1880   Mr.  H.  P.  Hubbard,  the  publisher  of  this  book,  then  at  the 
head  of  the  International  Newspaper  Agency  at  New  Haven,  Connecti- 
cut, conceived  the  idea  of  publishing  a  Newspaper  and  Bank  Directory 
of  the  World   which  should  be  complete  in  every  respect. 

He  secured  the  aid  and  endorsement  of  Hon.  William  M.  Evarts, 
Secretary  of  State,  who,  in  a  special  letter,  requested  each  American 
consul  to  give  all  the  aid  in  his  power  to  Mr.  Hubbard  in  "this  work  oi 
international  importance."  _ 

With  this  endorsement  he  was  fortified  at  every  point,  and  m  seven- 
teen months  from  the  time  pen  was  first  put  to  paper,  the  first  two  vol- 
umes were  issued  complete,  and  at  once  rivctted  the  attention  oi  news- 
papers and  business  men  generally. 

It  was  the  first  work  of  the  kind  ever  published,  and  up  to  this  date- 
no  one  has  essayed  to  follow  him.  The  year  following  Volume  3  was 
issued  being  partly  printed  on  -  Cosmopolitan  Paper,"  made,  from  old 
papers  f^m  every  country  in  the  world.  These  books  weighed 
over  four  pounds  each,  aggregating  over  3.900  pages,  an.  cost  to  pro- 
duce 5  000  copies  of  each  volume  over  $60,000.  They  contained  over 
7oo  illustrations  and  , 60  languages.     The  books  are  now  very  scarce. 

beine-  out  of  print.  «        .     .  r 

Thev  contained,  in  addition  to  the  names  and  descriptions  of  over 
4o.ooo' newspapers  and  ,0.000  banks,  a  gazetteer  and  maps  of  all 
countries. 


406 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Of  this  unique  compendium,  the  New  York  Tribune  said  in  a  two- 
column  review,  "  This  marvelous  work  is  worthy  to  stand  beside  the 
dictionary  and  the  encyclopaedia."  The  preface,  as  well  as  all  important 
descriptive  matter,  was  in  English,  French,  German  and  Spanish,  in 
addition  to  the  vernacular  of  each  country. 

To  give  an  idea  of  how  far  this  was  carried,  the  title  of  the  book  is 
herewith  given  in  English,  Greek,  French,  German,  Chinese,  Spanish, 
Italian  and  Arabic. 

What  the  secretary  of  the  New  York  Geographical  Society  was  pleased 
to  call  "  the  most  important  contribution  to  geographical  literature  for 
twenty  years,"  also  appeared  in  the  gazetteer  department  of  the  work, 
in  the  shape  of  the  name  of  each  country  in  all  obtainable  languages. 

One  specimen  will  give  an  idea  of  how  much  difference  there  is: 

EGYPT. 

Egyptian — Musr.     French — Egypte.      German — Aegypten.     Russian — 

Egiptia.    Italian — Egitto.    Spanish — Egipto.   Portuguese — Egitto. 

Swedish — Egypten.     Turkish — Kibt;  or,  Keebt.     Arabic — 

Missr;  or,  Musr.    Coptic — Cham;  or,  Kehn.    Hebrew — 

Mizr;  or,  Mizraim.     Chinese — An2  Chi2.  ij^A. 

It  was  dedicated  jointly  to  President  Arthur  and  Queen  Victoria  as 
"  Representative  heads  of  the  great  English-speaking  Nations  of  the  earth, 
whose  one  hundred  millions  of  people,  having  the  same  origin,  the  same 
language  and  the  same  standards  of  civilization,  occupy  the  front  rank 
among  the  instrumentalities  for  the  enlightenment  of  mankind P 

The  regular  business  edition  was  bound  in  scarlet  cloth  and  gold,  with 
red  edges.  Its  outside  brilliancy  caused  the  late  Oliver  Wendell  Holmes 
to  write  Mr.  Hubbard  in  the  following  happy  vein: 

"  When  I  first  looked  upon  it,  red  all  over,  so  that  it  seemed  to 

'  Blush  like  a  banner  bathed  in  slaughter,' 
I  thought  it  must  be  an  account  of  all  the  bloodiest  battles  ever  fought,  and  I  was  much  pleased  to 
find,  on  looking  through  its  pages,  that  it  might  rather  be  called  a  General  Index  of  Peaceful 
Civilization." 

Copies  of  volumes  i  and  2  were  sent  to  all  American  consuls,  and  sev- 
eral have  informed  the  writer  that  they  are  the  most  useful  and  most 
called  for  books  in  the  consular  library.* 


*  Mr.  Felix  Mathews,  the  American  Consul  at  Tangiers,  Morocco,  in  making  his  report  that  there 
were  "no  newspapers  or  banks  in  Morocco,"  thought  Mr.  Hubbard  too  liberal  to  reward  him  for  so 
slight  (though  to  Mr.  II.  necessary)  service;  and  as  a  special  compliment  obtained  from  the  Sultan 
and  sent  to  Mr.  Hubbard  several  gold  coins  which  were  struck  by  the  Moors  at  Granada  when  they 
occupied  Spain  in  about  1200,  together  with  a  piece  of  the  curtain  of  the  Alhambra,  which  the  Moors 
despoiled.  It  is  silk  embroidery  on  just  such  canvas  as  the  ladies  use  to-day,  and  the  colors  of  the 
silk  are  remarkably  clear  and  bright. 


HUBBARD'S 

Newspaper  #  Bank  Directory 


^flPIl 


IIjH- 


(WITH  GAZETTEER  AND  ATLAS  COMBINED), 

XOYBAPJOY 

Tlayxboiuoc,    xardkoyo;   itaaCbv  *d>u    ifyfizpidaiv  xae  Tpane- 

Cwv  <rbu  race:  dceuduvasai* 

(To   ipyov    Tizpiiytt    cthv    xoiq,    dUoec;    lyxuxXoxeoeiav    xai 

falavTa). 


DICTIONNAIRE 
des  Journaux  et  des  Banques  du  monde 

PAR 

HUBBARD 

(Avec  Geographic  et  Atlas  combines.) 


HUBBARD'S 
Zeitungs-  und  Bank-Adressbuch 

DER. 

WELT, 
(Mit  Liinder-Beschreibung  und  Atlas  verbuodeu.). 


DIRECTORIO 
De  las  Gacetas  y  de  los  Bancos  del  Mundo 

DE 

HUBBARD 

(Con  Gacetero  y  Atlas  combinados.) 


GUIDA  DI  HUBBARD, 

pei  Giornali  e  *per  le  Banche 

PEL  MONDO 

(Con  iudice  geogralico  alfubetico  descrittivo 
e  annesso  atlante.) 


The  name  in  English,  <;reek,  French.  German,  Chinese,  Spanish,  Italian  and  Arabia 

407 


4o8  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY 

An  edition  de  luxe  was  prepared  on  very  heavy  paper  and  bound  in 
embossed  Russia  leather,  and  sent,  through  the  State  Department  at 
Washington  and  American  Ministers  Resident,  to  all  the  crowned 
heads  and  rulers  of  the  world,  from  all  of  whom  Mr.  Hubbard  received 
acknowledgments  in  their  languages.  A  large  portfolio  containing  these 
memorabilia,  together  with  letters  from  John  Bright,  Mr.  Gladstone, 
Tennyson,  Victor  Hugo,  Longfellow,  Whittier,  Emerson  and  scores  of 
others  prominent  in  literary,  military,  political  and  social  life,  is  among 
his  choicest  treasures. 

Six  enormous  scrap-books  filled  with  newspaper  reviews  of  this  book 
in  over  a  dozen  languages  attest  the  opinion  of  the  press  of  the  world. 
In  these  reviews  the  adjectives  "  marvelous,"  "  stupendous,"  "  unpar- 
alleled," "unique,"  "grand,"  and  others,  were  used  liberally. 

The  Edinburgh,  Scotland,  Guardian,  when  the  book  was  first  an- 
nounced, said  that  the  feat  was  "  too  great  even  for  an  American  to 
accomplish."  When  it  was  finished,  the  Guardian  took  the  space  of 
nearly  four  columns  to  own  up  that  it  was  well  done  ! 

BRAVE   HUBBARDS. 

In  the  war  of  1812  several  hundred  citizens  of  Marblehead  were  cap- 
tured by  the  enemy  and  confined  in  Dartmoor  Prison.  Among  them 
was  Mr.  John  Hubbard,  son  of  the  pastor  of  the  First  Congrega- 
tional Church  of  Marblehead.  In  181 5  they  were  released  and  put  on 
board  cartel  ships  for  home.  The  Captain  of  John's  ship  was  inimical 
to  Americans  and  a  timid  sailor,  being  afraid  to  set  all  sail.  The  Mar- 
blehead prisoners,  expert  navigators,  were  disgusted  with  his  slow  pro- 
gress and  unskilful  sailing,  and  impatient  to  reach  welcome  homes  and 
embrace  glad  hearts,  so  they  elected  John  Hubbard  commander 
of  the  ship,  who  politely  informed  the  Captain  and  his  crew  that  they 
would  be  relieved  for  a  short  period.  The  Captain  seeing  a  determined 
look  of  business  upon  his  face  yielded,  and  de  facto  Captain  John  Hub- 
bard crowded  on  all  the  ship's  canvas  and  speedily  reached  Marblehead. 

William  B.  Hubbard,  Marblehead,  manned  one  of  the  guns  on  the 
Cumberland  when  she  was  run  into  by  the  rebel  ram  Merrimac  and 
sunk.  "  When  the  ship  was  sinking,  and  death  stared  them  in  the  face, 
the  first  thought  of  many  was,  naturally,  that  of  self-preservation.  Not 
so  with  Hubbard.  His  powder-boy  had  become  frightened  and  could 
not  be  found.  '  I  am  determined  to  have  one  more  shot  at  them,'  cried 
the  gallant  Hubbard,  and  immediately  went  below  to  procure  am- 
munition. On  his  return,  as  he  approached  his  gun  to  reload  it,  a  shot 
irom  the  enemy  laid  him  on  the  deck.  He  went  down  with  the  ship, 
nobly  dying  at  his  post."— S^/w/r/  Read's  Hist.  Marblehead,  Mass. 


Mrs.  Colman  S.  Hubbard  and  Youngest  Grandchildren. 


409 


4io  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

ANCIENT  WATERTOWN  OR  "  NORUMBEGA." 
Along-  the  shores  of  the  Charles  River  in  Massachusetts  are  unmis- 
takable traces  of  the  visits  of  Norsemen  in  the  ioth  and  nth  centuries, 
the  principal  adventurers  being  Biarni  Heriulfsson,  Leif  Ericsson,  his 
brother  Thorvald,  and  Thorfinn  Karlsefin.  Prof.  Eben  Norton  Hors- 
ford,  deceased,  performed  an  inestimable  service  to  the  intelligent  world 
by  years  of  arduous  labor  spent  in  pursuing  the  delights  of  archaeology 
about  this  section  of  Massachusetts.  He  found  their  landmarks  prin- 
cipally at  Cambridge,  Elmwood  or  Gerry's  Landing,  Watertown,  and 
above  that  point.  The  sagas  of  Iceland  corroborate  the  Professor's 
conclusions.  Sites  of  log  houses,  forts,  dams,  docks,  fish-pits  and  an 
amphitheatre  testify  to  the  truth  of  these  discoveries. 

At  Watertown,  where  George  Hubbard  the  American  emigrant  prob- 
ably landed,  himself  descended  from  that  hardy,  exploring  race,  is  the 
amphitheatre.  (The  place  was  then  called  Norumbega,  Norvega  or 
Norbega,  meaning  "  from  Norway.")  The  terraces,  six  of  them,  are 
plainly  marked,  and  a  pool  of  water  occupies  the  center.  At  the  dams 
at  Watertown  was  a  pretty  fall  of  water,  the  dams  being  constructed  of 
smooth  boulders  from  the  adjacent  fields.  Mrs.  Elizabeth  G.  Shepard 
says  that  "  the  docks  are  plainly  discernible — walled  channels  between 
the  islands — these  islands  once  being  wharves  where  the  masur  wood 
was  loaded,  the  dried  salmon,  and  the  furs  and  skins.  *  *  *  Leaving 
Fort  Norumbega  with  its  paved  ditches  and  evidences  of  extensive 
fisheries  you  can  go  down  the  Charles  (the  Norumbega  River  of  other 
days)  until  you  approach  the  site  of  the  olden  city  on  its  banks.  The 
terraces  which  rise  above  the  walls  are  well  worthy  of  inspection  and 
are  extremely  interesting.  They  are  sharply  defined,  and  here  and 
there  very  old  trees  grow  out  from  their  edges,  having  sprung  from 
seeds  that  lodged  there.  The  distance  from  the  walls  to  the  first  terrace 
is  quite  enough  to  have  given  space  for  games,  wrestling,  or  other  pas- 
times; and  as  the  Norsemen  were  exceedingly  fond  of  swimming,  per- 
forming wonderful  feats  of  strength  and  endurance  under  water,  these 
terraces  might  have  afforded  opportunity  for  an  extended  view  up  and 
down  the  river  during  such  performances." 

"  Thevet  saw  Norumbega  in  1556  and  described  it  as  situated  on  the 
banks  of  'one  of  the  most  beautiful  rivers  in  all  the  world.'  Wytfliet 
saw  it  in  1597,  Douay  in  1607,  and  Lescarbot  in  1610.  All  quote  the 
statement  that  '  to  the  north  of  Virginia  is  Norumbega,  which  is  well 
known  as  a  beautiful  city  and  a  great  river.'  " 

In  1659  David  Ingram,  an  English  sailor,  found  Norumbega.  Sir 
Humphrey  Gilbert,  Capt.  John  Smith,  and  Champlain  searched  for  it, 
but  were  unable  to  re-discover  it. 


HENRY    EUGENE    HUBBARD, 

WILLIAM  AKTIiru  HUBBAKD  AM)  KATHEKINE  EGGLESTOH  HUBBARD, 

of  Dansville,  N.  Y. 

..Descended  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct.) 


411 


4I2  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

A  GOOD  OLD  FOREFATHER. 

EBENEZER  HUBBARD  (b  in  Concord,  Mass.,  abt  1778,  d  there  in 
Oct,  1870)  was  an  eccentric  bachelor  farmer  who  pooh-poohed  at  women 
and  battled  at  adverse  odds  against  the  small  boys  of  the  town.  Not- 
withstanding his  eccentric  nature  he  possessed  a  sturdy  patriotism.  It 
was  of  tough  fibre,  and  stood  out  prominently  when  seeking  to  accom- 
plish a  purpose.  He  lived  in  retirement  in  the  house  on  Hubbard 
Street  which  he  inherited  from  his  forefathers,  and  in  which  stopped 
John  Hancock  and  Samuel  Adams  while  attending  the  first  provincial 
congress  in  1774.  He  was  found  dead  one  morning  by  the  neighbors 
sitting  in  his  chair.  Through  his  persistent  agitation  and  philanthropy 
America  now  rejoices  in  the  possession  of  a  handsome  monument  to  her 
sons'  martial  pluck.  It  is  situated  on  the  left  bank  of  the  Concord 
River  (looking  toward  the  mouth),  directly  opposite  to  a  tall  granite 
shaft  erected  by  Concord  inhabitants  in  1836  upon  the  right  bank  of  the 
river,  or  where  the  British  stood.  The  pedestal  is  of  granite  and  the 
statue  is  seven  feet  high. 

Ralph  Waldo  Emerson's  address,  April  19,  1875,  at  the  ceremonies  of 
the  dedication  of  the  monument  is  as  follows :  "  Fellow-Citizens! 
EBENEZER  HUBBARD,  a  farmer  who  inherited  land  in  this  village 
on  which  the  British  troops  committed  depredations,  and  who  had  a 
deep  interest  in  the  history  of  the  said  town,  erected  many  years  ago  a 
flag-staff  on  his  ground,  and  never  neglected  to  hoist  the  stars  and 
stripes  on  the  nineteenth  of  April  and  the  fourth  of  July.  It  grieved 
him  deeply  that  yonder  monument,  erected  by  the  town  in  1836,  should 
have  been  built  on  the  ground  on  which  the  enemy  stood  in  the  Concord 
fight,  instead  of  on  that  which  the  Americans  occupied;  and  he  be- 
queathed in  his  will  $1,000  to  the  town  of  Concord,  on  condition  that  a 
monument  should  be  erected  on  the  identical  ground  occupied  by  our 
minute  men  and  militia  on  that  day;  and  an  additional  sum  of  $600  on 
the  condition  that  the  town  should  build  a  foot-bridge  across  the  river 
on  the  site  where  the  old  bridge  stood  in  1775.  The  late  Mr.  Stedman 
Buttrick  [grandson  of  Major  John  Buttrick  who  commanded  the  Ameri- 
can ploughboy  fighters  at  the  battle]  having  given  the  necessary  piece 
of  land  on  the  other  side  of  the  river,  the  town  accepted  the  legacy  of 
Mr.  HUBBARD,  built  the  bridge,  and  employed  Daniel  C.  French  to 
prepare  a  statue  to  be  erected  on  the  specified  spot.  Meanwhile  the 
United  States  Congress  gave  to  this  town  ten  bronze  cannon  to  furnish 
the  artist  with  fit  material  to  complete  his  work,"  etc. 

The  handsome  statue  was  erected,  and  added  materially  to  the  repu- 
tation of  the  sculptor,  Daniel  C.  French,  an  inhabitant  of  Concord.  On 
it  is  a  verse  of  Ralph  Waldo  Emerson's,  who  is  now  sleeping  the  long 


UNCLASSIFIED  DA  TA  AND  MISCELLANY  „  ,  , 

slumber  (near  the  grave  of  Nathaniel  Hawthorne)  on  a  hill  in  Sleepy 

Hollow  Cemetery  in  Concord.     The  words  are  familiar  to  all  patriots. 

By  the  rude  bridge  that  arched  the  flood, 
Their  flag  tn  April's  breeze  unfurled: 
Here  nine  the  embattled  farmers  stood. 
And  fired  the  shot  lirard  round  the  world. 

The  "rude  bridge,"  which  was  quite  rustic,  was  torn  down  when 
THOMAS  was  about  ten  years  of  age.  It  was  replaced  by  its  counter- 
part, which  gave  way  to  another  a  short  time  ago.  So  intense  was  his 
interest  to  have  his  heart's  desire  fulfilled  that  at  the  State  muster  in 
Massachusetts  in  1869  he  invaded  General  Butler's  headquarters  and 
endeavored  to  enlist  his  support  in  its  projection.  Thus  may  the  tourist 
not  only  see  the  fatal  spot  where  British  oppression  was  strangled  and 
a  new-born  liberty  cradled,  but  he  may  also  see  the  standing  testimonial 
of  a  HUBBARD  who  commemorated  the  imperishable  event  bv  an 
enduring  manifestation  of  his  Americanism. 


COPY   OF   A    LOVE    LETTER  WRITTEN    BY  DANIEL    HUB- 
BARD TO  HIS  FIANCEE  MISS  MARTHA  COIT. 
Dear  Creature: 

My  tenderest  wishes  are  that  the  fair  Soverign  of  my  Hopes 
and  Fears  be  now  as  happy  as  the  season  looks  gay  and  joyful:  it  is  a 
most  beautiful  and  charming  hour!  every  favorable  circumstance  of 
Nature  conspires  to  crown  it  with  Honour  and  Delight.  The  happiest 
Period  the  various  year  can  boast  now  hovers  towards  us  in  all  the 
radient  airs  of  genial  Light,  attendant  on  the  approaching  Sun.  The 
youthful  morning  unveils  her  rosie  blushes:  and  the  faithful  Day  is  so 
far  risen  that  I  have  already  visited  a  neighbouring  Verdant  Field 
where  I  have  given  it  in  charge  to  all  the  choicest  Herbs  and  Flowers, 
by  the  ministry  of  Ten  Thousand  sun-beams  which  alite  to  paint  their 
colours,  or  drink  their  juices,  to  offer  up  a  sacrifice  of  pure  Incens'e  to 
the  gracious  Power  who  indulges  us  mortals  so  much  Pleasure  in  his 
excellent  Works.  The  Heavens  are  all  serene;  The  clear  air  perfumed 
with  the  sweet  odors  of  opening  Flowers  and  spreading  Blossoms  of 
faithful  Trees. 

The  face  of  the  earth  smiles;  everything  seems  pleased  and  all  the 
creatures  in  good  Humour;  in  a  word,  my  Dear,  my  charming  all,  this 
once  the  whole  creation  looks  like  you.  All  these  Beauties  I  severally 
admire  in  proportion  of  the  Resemblance  they  bare  to  you;  and  none  of 
the  Pleasures  errising  from  the  contemplation  of  them  shall  I  ever  want 
while  I  may  call  you  mine.  This  prerogative  is  the  highest  distinction  my 
ambition  aspires  after.  When  what  I  now  write  comes  to  your  hand,  walk 
into  your  garden  and  imitate  the  pleasure  I  have  now  been  enjoying. 


4I4  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

There  view  with  curious  eye  the  fair  and  elegant  structure  of  your 
Tulips  and  Twenty  more  little  Darling  vegetables,  for  which  I  have  no 
names,  and  the  beautiful  light  of  colours  which  hover  over  them:  and 
assure  yourself  that  there  is  less  harmony  in  the  nice  arrangement  of 
their  lights  and  shades  than  there  is  in  a  sett  of  generous  Passions,  regu- 
lated by  the  Love  of  an  ingenious  and  virtuous  woman.  Think  withal 
what  Improvements  in  Happiness  we  may  hereafter  help  one  another  to 
make  when  with  the  sweets  of  nature  and  the  nameless  joys  of  Love  we 
shall  possess  the  superior  Blessing  of  a  Daily  Intercourse  with  the  great 
Original  of  Bliss,  who  amidst  the  Temporary  Delight  his  goodness  shall 
indulge  us,  will  prepare  us  for  a  state  of  immortal  youth  and  Pleasure 
in  the  fairest  garden  of  his  own  planting  in  the  Paradise  above.  To 
that  happy  Place  my  fair,  my  dearest  Soul,  we'll  travel  Hand  in  Hand. 
The  virtuous  joys  of  all  our  tenderest  Hours  shall  shoot  up  into  Divine 
Transports  at  the  expectations  of  an  eternal  Possession  of  all  the  Good 
an  infinite  Benevolence  has  to  give.  The  Duty  of  my  station  calls  me 
off:  I  must  forbare  writing:  My  regards,  &c.  Martha,  do'n't  forget  me: 
for  as  never  other  man  was,  intirely  and  by  your  own  condescending 
choice,  I  am  forever  yours, 


N.  H.,  April  27,  1731. 


-OAx£-^ 


Boston  Births — Mary,  dau  Richard  and  Mary,  Dec  16,  17 18;  John,  son 
Gabriel  and  Ruth,  May  8  [or  18],  1722;  Mary,  dau  Joshua  and  Hannah, 
Feb  19,  1726;  Rebecca,  dau  Benjamin  and  Rebecca  Hubbard  [or  Ho- 
bartj,  Jan  28,  1735;  Therase,  dau  Samuel  and  Susanna,  July  5,  1736; 
Miles,  son  Miles  and  Mary,  Sep  4,  1740.  Old  South  Church  Baptisms — 
Sylvanus,  son  of   Benjamin  and    Rebecca   Hubbard    [Hobart?],    1743; 

James,  son  John  and  Sara,  Aug  12,  1683;  Dorothy,  dau ,  May  20, 

1693.  Deaths — Elizabeth,  Dec  20,  17 10;  Mrs.  Susanna,  July,  1789;  James 
P.,  Sep,  1789;  James  P.,  aged  10,  Oct,  1789;  Claud,  June,  1793.  Burials — 
child  of  Joseph,  Oct  5,  1706;  child  of  Lazarus,  Aug  31,  1712;  Mrs.  Hub- 
bard, Sep  29,  1717;  Indian  man  of  Mr.  Hubbard,  Sep  27,  1719;  child  of 
John,  Jan  17,  1719-20.  Marriages — Lazarus  Hubbard  to  Jane  Vodin,  Oct 
9,  1702,  by  Cotton  Mather;  John  Hubbard  to  Mary  Fairbanks,  Nov  30, 
171 1 ;  Margaret  Hubbard  to  James  Halkerston,  Oct  8,  1719;  Gabriel 
Hubbard  to  Ruth  Warriner,  Sep  28,1721;  Daniel  Hubbard  to  Rachel 
Low,  Oct  30,  1723;  William  Hubbard  to  Waitawhile  Cobbet,  Apl  30, 
1724;  John  Hubbard  to  Mercy  Burrell,  Apl  27,  1724;  Francis  Hubbard 
to  Rachel  Payn,  Jan  24,  1724;  Joshua  Hubbard  to  Hannah  Allen,  June 


UNCLA  SSIFIED  DA  TA  A  ND  M ISC  ELLA  NY.         415 


2.  1 


1726;  Joseph  Hubbard  to  Elizabeth  Pierce,  Jan  3,  1739;  Lazarus 
Hubbard  to  Mary  Harrow,  Mch  7,  1744,  Peter  Hubbard,  Jr.,  to  Lucretia 
Gill,  both  of  Weymouth,  Dec  1,  1747;  Mar7  Hubbard  to  Nathan  Nevans, 
Jan'22,  1749;  Mary  Hubbard  to  William  Lowder,  Dec  20,  1750;  Joshua 
Hubbard  to  Silence  Twing,  Sep  29,  1769;  John  Hibbut  to  Rebecca  Gor- 
don Sep  7,  1779;  Joshua  Hubbard  to  Abigail  Clarke,  Sep  19,  1784,  Sarah 
Hubbard  to  James  Barnes,  Mch  30,  1786;  Abigail  Hubbard  to  Aaron 
Allen,  Aug  28,  1796. 

Danvers  (Mass.)  Marriages— Lucy  Hubbard  to  Jonathan  Smith,  June 
13  1782;  Rachel  Hubbard  of  Danvers  to  James  Dawson  of  Boston,  Apl 
15'  1784.  Navburyport  (Mass.)  Marriages— John  Hubbard  to  Mary 
Butler,  Sep  8,  1777.  Salem  (Mass.)  Marriages— Mrs.  Deborah  Hub- 
bard [or  Hobart]  of  Salem  to  Rev.  Peter  Clark  at  Braintree,  Nov  6, 
1719;  Susannah  Hubbard  to  Samuel  Symonds,  Dec  31,  1724;  Miles 
Hubbard  to  Lucv  Peabody,  Oct  27, 1771;  Mary  Hubbard  to  John  Lewis, 
Mch  9,  1779;  Patty  Hubbard  of  Beverly  to  John  Fairfield  of  Salem,  Jan 
29,  1795-  Marriage  Intentions— Apl  15,  *775,  John  Brady>  late  of  Glou" 
cester,  now  of  Salem,  and  Mary  Hubbard  of  Salem;  April  10,  1779, 
Elizabeth  Hubbard  and  William  Bradshaw,  both  of  Salem;  June  15,  17 10, 
Deborah  Hubbard  and  Ebenezer  Russell,  both  of  Salem.   Salem  Family 

Records— Noah  Hobart  m   Patience  Nov  13,  1783-     Children- 

Sukey  (b  Oct  10,  1784),  Hannah  (b  Oct  n,  1786),  Ebenezer  (b  July  19, 
1789)  Lucy  (b  Mch  30,  1792),  Ruth  (b  Sep  3, 1794)  John  (b  Feb  3, 1799)- 
Rev  Peter  Clark  m  Nov  6,  17 19,  at  Braintree,  Mrs.  Deborah  Hobart  ot 
Salem,  and  had  Peter  (b  Oct  1,  1720),  Hobart  (b  Nov  23,  1721),  Caleb  (b 
Mch  16,  1723-4),  Mary  (b  Nov  16,  1725),  Deborah  (b  Dec  14,  1727,  d  Feb 
23  1728-9),  Samuel  (b  Mch  13,  1729-3°),  Deborah  (b  Aug  n,  1732), 
Hugh  (b  Oct  27,  1734),  John  (b  Oct  4,  1736),  and  Elizabeth  (b  Sep  25, 
1737)  Topsfield  (Mass.)— Mary,  wife  of  Elnathan,  died  Mch  31,  i773 
Aaron  Hubbard  of  Topsfield  and  Martha  Adams  of  Beverly  married 
TanS  1821  Exeter(N.H)  Town  Records- "May  04, 1636,  Mr.  Hubbard: 
J  £      s-     d- 

For  owne  thousand  of  Boards  at  Seaven  Shillings  a 

hundereth °°°3-   10"  °° 

Item:  for  55S  foote  of  boards  &  Car:  20s 0002.  07.  06 

paid  In  full °°°5-   '7-  °6  " 

-At  a  town  meeting  1667  [or  1687],  15  day  of  March-John  Oilman  by 
an  order  (an  act  of  the  towne)  was  empowered  to  petition  to  the  Gen- 
eral Court  for  an  enlargement  of  the  bounds  of  the  towne,  &  to  pros- 
ecute that  business,  &  to  procure  Captaine  Hubbard  or  Josiar  Hubbard 
to  assist  him  &c." 


4I6  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

A  HUMOROUS  SKIT. 

"One  Thousand  Years  of  Hubbard  History  "  is  the  title  of  a  book  now  in  press  and  to  be  published 
in  New  York.  Though  this  takes  the  family  back  two  centuries  beyond  the  Norman  conquest  and 
to  Norseland,  what  good  is  it?  They  are  bound  to  trace  to  and  can  not  trace  beyond  the  original 
Mother  Hubbard. 

The  publication  of  the  above  editorial  in  the  St.  Louis  Star  Sayings 
led  a  well-known  newspaper  writer,  a  Hubbard  descendant,  to  sharpen 
his  pencil  and  write  the  following  about  what  is  probably  the  oldest 
nursery  rhyme  in  existence.  The  publisher  of  this  volume,  in  common 
with  all  other  descendents  of  the  name,  duly  bore  his  share  of  raillery 
about  his  maternal  ancestry.  He  found  it  the  best  way  to  join  in  the 
rhyme  in  a  jolly  way.  That  seemed  to  take  the  edge  off  from  his  com- 
panions fun  somewhat.  He  therefore  feels  at  liberty  to  insert  this  bit 
( >f  humor,  according  to  those  who  do  not  appreciate  the  keen  points  and 
bright  satire  on  all  who  would  travesty  the  name  the  privilege  of  re- 
moving the  pages  from  the  book. 

OUR    MATERNAL    PROGENITOR. 

Manifestly  it  would  be  abortive  to  present  a  genealogical  history  of 
the  Hubbard  family  without  recognizing  the  fact  that  the  illustrious 
tribe  had  a  maternal  as  well  as  a  paternal  progenitor.  In  fact,  it  would 
be  worse  than  that,  for  while  the  fierce  sea  king,  Hubba,  thundered 
down  the  corridors  of  time  for  a  short  distance,  and  then  slid  off  un- 
noticed into  some  of  the  by-ways  of  history  that  are  only  trodden  by 
the  tireless  footsteps  of  antiquarians  and  such,  the  old  lady  who  bore 
the  full  name  Hubbard,  from  the  first,  has  ambled  along  on  the  broad 
highway  of  public  attention,  quietly  and  quaintly,  leading  her  dog,  and 
making  no  disturbance.  Hubba  was  prominent  for  a  time.  She  is 
prominent  for  all  time.  Her  history  is  briefly  told  in  the  books.  To 
the  world,  more  familiarly,  it  is  repeated  more  often  than  that  of  many 
heroes  and  heroines  who  achieved  more  startling  feats  than  she.  Not 
even  truthful  George,  the  heroic  child  with  the  hatchet,  is  more  often 
mentioned  or  better  remembered  than  is  Old  Mother  Hubbard.  It  is 
very  unfortunate  that  we  have  no  data  to  present  of  her  lineage.  Some 
sensitive  relative,  we  understand,  destroyed  the  records.  She  doubtless 
had  parents,  but  who  they  were  is  not  apparent.  She  had  family  ties, 
unquestionably,  else  the  tribe  of  Hubbards  would  hardly  be  as  numer- 
ous as  it  is.  Of  these  family  ties,  however,  tradition  tells  us  nothing. 
After  the  manner  of  nearly  all  the  chroniclers  of  antiquity  who  wrote 
contemporaneous  history,  those  who  wrote  of  her  contented  themselves 
with  recording  those  salient  facts  in  her  life  story  which  best  illustrate 
the  prominent  and  attractive  traits  of  her  character. 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY.  *I7 

From  the  meagre  details  of  this  most  admirable  woman's  history, 
which  arc  all  that  remain  to  us,  it  is,  however,  alto-ether  impossible  to 
obtain  a  comprehensive  idea  of  what  she  must  have  been,  and  of  the 
influence  which  she  unquestionably  exerted  on  the  people  and  the  man- 
ners of  her  era.  What  that  era  was  it  is,  unfortunately,  impossible  to 
say.  The  rude  rhymes  which  perpetuate  her  noble  deeds  have  been 
handed  down  from  generation  to  generation,  until  looking  backward, 
we  arc  utterly  unable  to  imagine  how  remote  was  the  period  of  her  life. 
Certain  allusions,  as  those  to  a  cupboard,  to  a  tailor,  to  linen,  and  the 
like,  make  it  certain  that  some  measure  of  civilization  had  been  attained 
before  she  died,  if,  indeed,  she  can  be  said  to  have  died  in  any  true 
sense  of  the  word.  The  unquestionable  antiquity  of  her  story,  however, 
proves  that  that  civilization  must  have  been  immature.  This  being 
demonstrated,  it  is  easy  for  the  careful  student  to  see  that  she  wa 
ordinary  person,  as,  of  course,  she  would  not  be,  being  a  Hubbard.  In 
the  first  place  she  was  notable  for  being- old  at  the  period  when  the 
historian's  attention  was  first  attracted  to  her.  She  was,  in  her  youth, 
no  social  reformer  or  agitator,  else  she  would  have  attracted  notice 
ier.  She  never  occupied  a  box  at  the  opera,  could  not  ride  a  bicycle, 
and  was  indifferent  upon  the  subject  of  "tariff  reform."  Her  placid, 
well-ordered  life  had  proceeded,  doubtless  on  conventional  lines,  so 
quietly  and  under  such  social  discipline,  that  it  was  not  until  after  her 
family  had  grown  up  and  gone  out  to  people  the  corners  of  the  earth,  as 
they  have  since  done,  that  she  became  in  any  way  notable.  Of  course, 
she  had  had  a  family.  The  existence  of  that  family  to-day  is  sufficient 
evidence  of  that  fact,  but,  aside  from  their  existence,  the  fact  that  she 
was  Mother  Hubbard  is  proof  positive.  A  person  can  not  be  a  mother 
without  having  progeny.  When  we  first  learn  of  her,  however,  she  is 
g  alone,  save  for  one  faithful  retainer. 

Mrs.  Hubbard  had  a  dog.  It  was  not  merely  that  she  was  kin* 
animals  generally  in  an  era  when  cruelty  to  the  lower  orders  of  crea- 
tion was  almost  universal,  but  she  had  adopted  this  particular  dog  for 
her  own.  Doubtless  her  motherly  bowels  yearned  for  the  little  ones 
whom  she  had  reared  and  who  had  gone  their  several  ways  after  grow- 
ing into  blooming  womanhood  and  lusty  manhood.  A  dog  was  not 
much,  but  he  served  as  a  solace  to  her  desolate  old  age.  The  dog  was 
hers.  Whether  pug,  water-spaniel,  or  one  of  other  aristocratic  line 
history saith  not.  He  was  probably  just  plain  dog.  Upon  him  she  lavished 
all  the  kindliness  and  tender  affection  which  had  made  her  house  a  nest 
of  refuge  to  those  numerous  young  Hubbards  whom  she  had  lost.  She 
hunted  for  bones  for  him  when  her  own  larder  was  empty.  She  sought 
to  array  him  in  purple  and  Irish  linen.     She  went,  weeping,  to   provide 


4I8  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

him  with  proper  sepulture  when  she  believed  him  defunct.  She  would 
have  done  for  him  anything  which  lay  in  her  power,  and  it  was  this 
patient,  long-suffering-,  never-tiring  affection  of  her  loving  heart  that 
not  only  educated  the  dog  into  the  doing  of  remarkable  stints,  but 
caused  the  historian  to  immortalize  her  name  by  simply  recording  some 
few  of  her  deeds. 

Such  in  brief  was  the  character  of  the  Mother  of  all  the  Hubbards. 
Slight  and  trivial  as  the  records  may  seem,  they  are  clear  indications  of 
some  of  the  traits  that  have  made  the  race  notable.  That  these  traits 
are  hereditary  no  Hubbard  can  doubt,  and  there  is  none  that  can  fail  in 
filial,  not  to  say  grand-filial,  respect  for  his  great  progenitress. 

Her  simple  and  touching  annals  have  inspired  not  only  the  historian 
but  the  poet  and  artist,  and  to  close  this  volume  without  an  appropriate 
mention  of  her  well-rounded  out  life  would  manifest  such  a  marked 
lack  of  fair  play  and  gallantry  towards  the  fair  sex  that  coming  genera- 
tions would  feel  injured  beyond  repair  at  such  uncalled  for  and  conspic- 
uous omission. 


SOME  AMERICAN  PATRIOTIC  SOCIETIES. 

THE  ORDER  OF  THE  CINCINNATI  was  founded  by  the  Ameri- 
can and  French  officers  at  the  Cantonments  of  the  Continental  Army  on 
the  Hudson  River  at  the  close  of  the  Revolution  in  May,  1783.  Thirteen 
State  Societies  were  formed,  and  one  in  France.  The  eldest  male  lineal 
descendant  only  from  one  of  these  original  officers  is  eligible  to  mem- 
bership. This  keeps  the  membership  list  quite  reduced  in  numbers,  and 
somewhat  impairs  the  enterprise  of  the  Order,  it  now  being  only  a  little 
over  400  in  point  of  numbers.  The  present  General  Officers  are  Hon. 
Robert  Milligan  McLane,  of  Maryland,  Acting  President-General;  Hon. 
Asa  Bird  Gardiner,  LL.D.,  of  Rhode  Island,  Secretary-General;  Mr. 
John  Schuyler,  of  New  York,  Treasurer-General;  Mr.  Thomas  Pinck- 
ney  Lowndes,  of  South  Carolina,  Assistant  Secretary-General;  and  Mr. 
Henry  Thayer  Drowne,  of  Rhode  Island,  Assistant  Treasurer-General. 

THE  AZTEC  CLUB  was  formed  in  1847  in  the  City  of  Mexico,  and 
was  originally  composed  of  officers  of  the  United  States  who  served  in 
the  Mexican  War,  and  who  were  actuated  in  associating  themselves 
together  by  a  worthy  desire  "  to  cherish  the  memories  and  keep  alive 
the  traditions  that  cluster  about  the  names  of  those  officers  who  took 
part  in  the  Mexican  War."  Membership  is  confined  to  officers  of  the 
Army,  Navy,  and  Marine  Corps  who  served  in  the  war  or  their  blood 
relatives.  Each  primary  member  may  nominate  as  his  successor  his 
son  or  a  blood  relative,  who  during  the  life  of  the  primary  member  is 
known  as  associate-member,  and  on  the  death  of  the  former  is  entitled, 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY.  4Ig 

as  his  representative,  to  full  membership.  The  headquarters  of  the  or- 
ganization are  in  Washington,  D.  C.  There  are  235  members,  which 
include  the  following  officers: 

President,  General  John  Porter  Hatch,  U.  S.  A.,  New  York  City; 
Vice-President  and  Treasurer,  Colonel  De  Lancey  Floyd-Jones,  U.  S.  A., 
New  York  City;  Secretary,  General  Horatio  Gates  Gibson,  U.  S.  A., 
Washington,  D.  C;  Assistant  Secretary,  Mark  Burckle  Hatch,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C. 

The  Society  of  the  SONS  OF  THE  AMERICAN  REVOLUTION 
was  the  outgrowth  of  a  sentiment  born  in  a  far-away  State.  July  4, 
1S76,  some  warm-blooded  descendants  of  the  Revolutionary  Patriots  in 
California  were  moved  to  organize  themselves  into  a  body  termed 
"  Sons  of  Revolutionary  Sires."  In  1889  this  Society  reorganized  and 
took  the  name  of  Sons  of  the  American  Revolution  to  keep  in  line  with 
various  State  Societies  in  the  East  which  had  then  been  formed  and 
were  bearing  this  title.  These  State  societies  formed  a  National  Society 
in  New  York  April  30,  1889,  and  were  chartered  in  Connecticut  in  this 
same  year.  There  are  now  besides  the  National  Society  in  New  York 
twenty-seven  State  societies  and  one  in  the  District  of  Columbia,  which 
is  third  in  numbers,  New  York  and  Connecticut  leading  it,  respectively, 
with  Massachusetts  fourth.  Its  membership  is  now  nearly  5,000,  and  is 
constantly  growing. 

The  National  Officers  are:  President-General,  Gen.  Horace  Porter, 
New  York;  Vice-Presidents-General,  Gen.  J.  C.  Breckinridge,  U.  S.  A.; 
Col.  T.  M.  Anderson,  U.  S.  A.;  William  R.  Griffith,  Maryland;  Edwin  S. 
Barrett,  Massachusetts;  John  Whitehead,  New  Jersey;  Secretary-Gen- 
eral, Franklin  Murphy,  New  Jersey;  Treasurer-General,  C.  W.  Haskins, 
New  York;  Registrar-General,  A.  Howard  Clark,  District  Columbia; 
Historian-General,  Henry  Hall,  New  York;  Chaplain-General,  Rt.  Rev. 
C.  E.  Cheney,  111. 

THE  SONS  OF  THE  REVOLUTION  came  into  existence  in 
1S76  in  New  York  City,  and  claim  priority  of  inception.  Their  purposes 
are  similar  to  those  of  the  other  society,  viz.:  "  to  keep  alive  among  our- 
selves and  our  descendants  the  patriotic  spirit  of  the  men  who,  in  mili- 
tary, naval,  or  civil  service,  by  their  acts  or  counsel,  achieved  American 
independence;  to  collect  and  secure  for  preservation  the  manuscript 
rolls,  records,  and  other  documents  relating  to  the  war  of  the  Revolu- 
tion, and  to  promote  intercourse  and  good  feeling  among  iis  members 
now  and  hereafter."  Eligibility  to  membership  is  confined  to  male  de- 
scendants, above  the  age  of  twenty-one  years,  from  an  ancestor  who  as 
either  a  military,  naval,  or  marine  officer,  soldier,  sailor,  or  marine,  or 
official  in   the  service  of  any  one  of  the  thirteen  original  colonies  or 


42o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

States,  or  of  the  National  Government,  representing  or  composed  of 
those  colonies  or  States,  assisted  in  establishing  American  independence 
during  the  war  of  the  Revolution  between  the  19th  day  of  April,  1775, 
when  hostilities  commenced,  and  the  19th  day  of  April,  1783,  when  they 
were  ordered  to  cease.*  The  general  society  of  the  "  Sons  of  the  Revo- 
lution" was  organized  by  delegates  from  the  then  existing  State  socie- 
ties in  1890.  There  are  now  twenty-one  State  societies.  Their  enter- 
prise is  not  so  marked  as  that  of  the  other  society,  nor  their  membership 
nearly  as  large,  but  the  personnel  is  equally  as  good. 

The  General  Officers  are:  General  President,  Ex-Go  v.  John  Lee 
Carroll,  Maryland;  General  Vice-President,  Garrett  D.  W.  Vroom,  New 
Jersey;  Second  Gen.  Vice-Pres.,  Col.  John  Screven,  Galveston;  General 
Treasurer,  R.  M.  Cadwalader,  Pennsylvania;  Assistant  Gen.  Treas., 
Stephen  Salisbury,  Massachusetts;  General  Secretary,  J.  M.  Montgom- 
ery, New  York;  Assistant  General  Secretary,  Wm.  H.  Harris,  Maryland; 
General  Registrar,  John  Woolf,  Jordan,  Pa.;  General  Historian,  T.  B. 
M.  Mason,  U.  S.  N.;  General  Chaplain,  Rev.  Morgan  Dix,  D.D.,  New 
York. 

THE  DAUGHTERS  OF  THE  AMERICAN  REVOLUTION  were 
organized  as  a  Society  in  the  City  of  Washington,  D.  C,  October  11, 
1890,  their  present  headquarters.  Their  membership  is  reported  by  the 
Secretary-General  to  be  about  7,000.  State  chapters  exist  in  thirty-six 
States,  presided  over  by  regents.  Any  woman  may  be  eligible  for  mem- 
bership who  is  of  the  age  of  eighteen  years,  and  who  is  descended  from 
an  ancestor  who,  "  with  unfailing  loyalty,  rendered  material  aid  to  the 
cause  of  independence  as  a  recognized  patriot,  as  soldier  or  sailor,  or  as 
a  civil  officer  in  one  of  the  several  colonies  or  States,  or  of  the  United 
Colonies  or  States,"  provided  that  the  applicant  shall  be  acceptable  to 
the  society.  Every  application  for  membership  must  be  endorsed  by  at 
least  one  member  of  the  National  Society,  and  is  then  submitted  to  the 
Registrars-General,  who  report  on  the  question  of  eligibility  to  the 
Board  of  Management,  and  upon  its  approval  the  applicant  is  enrolled 
as  a  member. 

The  officers  of  the  National  Society  are:  President-General,  Mrs. 
Adlai  E.  Stevenson,  Illinois;  Vice-President-General  (in  charge  of 
organization  of  chapters),  Mrs.  A.  C.  Geer,  Washington,  D.  C;  Vice- 
Presidents-General,  Mrs.  W.  R.  Beale,  Mrs.  F.  W.  Dickins,  Miss  Eugenia 
Washington,  Mrs.  A.  Howard  Clarke,  Miss  E.  L.  Dorsey,  Mrs.  Harry 
Heth,  Mrs.  R.  Ogden  Doremus,  Mrs.  J.  S.  T.  Stranahan,  Mrs.  Schuyler 
Hamilton,  Jr.,  Mrs.  A.  E.  Hill,  Mrs.  M.  S.  Lockwood,  Mrs.  John  Ritchie, 
Mrs.  A.  G.  Brackett,  Miss  Virginia  Miller,  Mrs.  H.  M.  Shepard,  Mrs. 
Joshua  Wilbour,  Mrs.  Hoke  Smith,  Mrs.  L.  P.  Blackburn,  Mrs.  Richard 

*  In  certain  cases  they  also  admit  by  collateral  descent. 


Society  of  Colonial  Wars 


Daughters  of 
American  Revolution. 


Daughters  of 
the   Revolution. 


Sons  of  American  Revolution.       Order  of  the  Cincinnati. 


Society  of  War  of  1812. 


The  Holland  Society.  Colonial  Dames  of  Amerm  a.  Sons  OF  mi   Involution. 

Badges  of  American  Patriotic  Societies. 
Bv  courtesy  of  "The  Spiritof  '76,"  u  Lafayette  Place.  New  York,  a  meritorious  monthlymagaztae, 

which  is  the  organ  of  all  the  patriotic  societies.    Any  person  can  join  upon  proof  of  record. 

421 


422  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Hayes,  Mrs.  Henry  Gannett;  Honorary  Vice-Presidents-General,  Mrs. 
Leland  Stanford,  Mrs.  Margaret  Hetzel,  Mrs.  Roger  A.  Pryor,  Mrs.  John 
R.  Putnam,  Mrs.  A.  Leo  Knott,  Mrs.  E.  H.  Walworth,  Mrs.  Matt  C. 
Butler;  Treasurer-General,  Mrs.  Miranda  Tullock;  Recording  Secre- 
tary-General, Mrs.  E.  Goodfellow;  Corresponding  Secretary-General, 
Miss  Mary  Desha;  Registrars-General,  Miss  F.  Wilbur,  Mrs.  Agnes  M. 
Burnett,  Mrs.  Charles  A.  Mann,  Miss  Anna  Mallett;  Surgeon-General, 
Dr.  A.  N.  McGee;  Historian-General,  Mrs.  Henry  F.  Blount;  Chaplain- 
General,  Mrs.  E.  T.  Bullock. 

A  New  York  society  of  DAUGHTERS  OF  THE  REVOLUTION 
was  organized  August  20,  1890.  The  general  society  was  organized  in 
the  city  of  New  York  September  9,  1891.  Chapters  exist  in  a  large  num- 
ber of  States  and  others  are  being  rapidly  formed.  Eligibility  to  mem- 
bership is  restricted  to  "  women  who  are  lineal  descendants  of  an  ances- 
tor who  was  a  military  or  naval  or  marine  officer,  soldier,  sailor,  or 
marine  in  actual  service  under  the  authority  of  any  of  the  thirteen 
.  colonies  or  States,  or  of  the  Continental  Congress,  and  remained  always 
loyal  to  such  authority,  or  descendants  of  one  who  signed  the  Declara- 
tion of  Independence,  or  of  one  who  as  a  member  of  the  Continental 
Congress  or  of  the  Congress  of  any  of  the  colonies  or  States,  or  as  an 
official  appointed  by  or  under  the  authority  of  any  such  representative 
bodies,  actually  assisted  in  the  establishment  of  American  independence 
by  service  rendered  during  the  War  of  the  Revolution,  becoming  thereby 
liable  to  conviction  of  treason  against  the  Government  of  Great  Britain, 
but  remaining  always  loyal  to  the  authority  of  the  colonies  or  States." 

The  officers  of  this  society  are  as  follows:  President-General,  Mrs. 
Edward  Paulet  Steers,  No.  2076  Fifth  Avenue,  New  York  City;  Curator- 
General,  Mrs.  Louise  F.  Rowe;  Secretary-General,  Mrs.  D.  Phcenix 
Ingraham,  No.  2052  Madison  Avenue,  New  York  City;  Treasurer- 
General,  Miss  Lucretia  V.  Steers;  Registrar-General,  Mrs.  M.  C.  Martin 
Casey;  Assistant  Registrar-General,  Mrs.  Hans  S.  Beattie;  Historian- 
General,  Mrs.  L.  De  B.  Gallison;  Librarian-General,  Mrs.  L.  Scofield 
Davis;  Chaplain-General,  Rev.  George  R.  Van  De  Water,  D.D.  The 
title  of  "  Founder-General  "  has  been  conferred  on  Mrs.  Flora  Adams 
Darling,  to  whom  the  society  owes  its  creation. 

CAPT.  JONAS  HUBBARD  AND  THE  QUEBEC  EXPEDITION. 
JONAS  HUBBARD,  b  in  Worcester,  Mass.,  May  21,  1739,  d  at 
Quebec  Dec  31,  1775,  was  the  son  of  Daniel  (b  1695,  d  Apl  28,  1784) 
and  Dorothy  Hubbard  (b  1698,  d  Apl  4,  1769)  and  had  a  brother  Zurriah 
(b  Mch  31,  1732)  and  sisters  Lucy  (b  Sep  28,  1727)  and  Elizabeth  (b  Oct 
23,  1729).     He  married  Mch  7,  1759,  Mary  Stevens.     Children— Reuben 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY  423 

<h  Sen,,  1761)  Levi  (see  Prominent  American  Hubbards),  Sally  (b 
Oct  <  767)  Jonas  (b  Dec  .9,  .770),  Thadbeus  (1.  Sep  7,  .77*?)  Abel 
b  Apl  o  773?)  -d  Aetemas  (b  Mch  ,9.  ,775)-  After  the  death  o, 
Cant  TONAS  HUBBARD  his  widow  and  children  removed  to  Pans. 
M?  where  they  were  early  settlers.  The  following  account  of  Arnold  s 
exne  ition  into  Canada,  wherein  Capt.  HUBBARD  (who  left  a  wife, 
severa  children  and  a  babe  in  arms  to  serve  Freedom)  figured  so  he- 
rohcaUv  has  been  principally  gathered  from  Lincoln's  History  of  \\  or- 

CeDeurrin:Uthe'  wmter  of  I774-5   General   Gage   contemplated  seizing 
stores  about  the  vicinity  of  Boston  that  a  bold  yeomanry  recognizing 
he  portentious  signs,  had  secreted  for  possible  forthcoming  emergen- 
des     He  sent  out  British  officers  disguised  as  countrymen  to  learn 
bdr  wner  aLts  and  to  learn  further  the  condition  of  the  roads  and 
the  topography  of  the  country.     These  officers  visited  tt  orceste,    Mass. 
The  a  ert  citizens  divined  their  objects  and  began  preparations  at  once 
Cartdn  Timothy  Bigelow  and  Ensign,  afterward  Lieutenant,  Hubbard 
win  drilUng  the  minute  men.     Lieutenant  Hubbard  was  a  farmer, 
but  had  a  Is"  other  business  interests  in  the  town  of  Worcester.     In 
March   ,775  the  company  of  minute  men  were  directed  to  tram  half  a 
davn  each  week  and  a  payment  of  one  shilling  was  allowed  to  each 
to  this  serv    e  a;d  a  penalty  provided,  equal  in  amount,  tor  absence. 
The  company  had  me    almost  daily  for  months.     When  the  weather 
pe'rmitteTthey  paraded  on  the  common  or  ^^^J^ 
storms  of  winter  they  were  drilled  in  some  hall.     Under  the  mstn ction 
of  Cant  T  mo  hv  Bigelow  they  had  attained  great  proficiency  in  military 
science  ano\vhen  afterwards  mustered  at  Cambridge  received  commen- 
dations' from  their  superior  officers  for  good  discipline  and  celerity  of 
evolution      A  few  months  before  hostilities  commenced  Captain  Rufus 

SI-      igrTInd  «  toadeto„d  them,  he  beheid  these  hope, 
rudl,;  blasted;  but  few  remained  steadfast  »£**££%££ 

the  Church.     Another  was  instantly  procured  and  the  tidings 


424  HUBBARD   HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

The  bell  rang  out  the  alarm,  cannon  were  fired  and  messengers  sent  to 
every  part  of  the  town  to  collect  the  soldiery.  As  the  news  spread  the 
implements  of  husbandry  were  thrown  by  in  the  field,  and  the  citizens 
left  their  homes  with  no  longer  delay  than  to  seize  their  arms.  In  a 
short  time  the  minute  men  were  paraded  on  the  green,  under  Capt. 
Timothy  Bigelow.  After  fervent  prayer  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Maccarty, 
they  took  up  the  line  of  march.  They  were  soon  followed  by  as  many 
of  the  train  bands  as  could  be  gathered  under  Capt.  Benjamin  Flagg. 
On  that  day  no  men  marched  from  the  town  of  Worcester  for  Concord. 
Intelligence  of  the  retreat  of  the  enemy  met  them  after  they  advanced, 
and  they  turned  toward  Boston.  When  Capt.  Bigelow  reached  the 
ancient  Howe  Tavern  in  Sudbury  he  halted  to  rest  his  men.  Capt.  Ben- 
jamin Flagg,  who  had  commenced  his  march  an  hour  or  two  later,  came 
up,  and,  insisting  on  pushing  forward  without  loss  of  time,  both  officers 
moved  on  to  Cambridge.  The  troops  were  there  reorganized.  Captain 
Bigelow  was  made  Major  in  Col.  Ward's  Regiment,  and  Lieutenant 
Hubbard  succeeded  him  to  the  captaincy.  April  24  the  company  con- 
sisted of  59  men,  all  from  Worcester.  John  Smith  and  William  Gates 
were  lieutenants. 

After  the  exciting  events  around  Boston  had  passed  and  a  lull  had 
ensued,  the  autumn  of  '75  found  a  few  active  minds  planning  the  bold 
expedition  against  Quebec,  alike  memorable  for  boldness  of  conception, 
chivalrous  daring  of  execution  and  melancholy  failure  in  its  results. 

The  object  of  the  service  or  the  destination  of  the  troops  were  known 
only  to  the  superior  officers.  It  was  understood  that  it  would  be  attended 
with  danger,  labor  and  suffering.  Hubbard,  brave  and  energetic,  did 
not  shrink  from  peril  or  hardship  in  the  cause  to  which  he  had  devoted 
himself,  and,  at  his  own  request,  was  appointed  to  the  command  of  a 
company  in  the  detachment  of  Arnold.  While  the  troops  halted  at  Fort 
Weston  on  the  Kennebec,  he  wrote  to  his  wife  in  terms  worthy  of  a 
patriot  martyr:  "  I  know  not  if  I  shall  ever  see  you  again.  The  weather 
grows  severe  cold,  and  the  woods,  they  say,  are  terrible  to  pass.  But  I 
do  not  value  life  or  property,  if  I  can  secure  liberty  for  my  children." 
Captain  Hubbard  shared  in  the  extreme  sufferings  of  the  march,  and 
probably  more  than  his  proportion,  as  acting  under  a  commission,  among 
those  who  had  no  reverence  for  artificial  distinctions  beyond  that  yielded 
to  the  legitimate  authority  of  courage  and  wisdom. 

On  the  19th  of  September,  1775,  they  sailed  from  Newburyport,  land- 
ing the  next  day  near  the  present  site  of  Augusta  on  the  Kennebec. 
Then  they  made  their  way  up  that  river  and  across  the  divide  into  the 
valley  of  the  St.  Lawrence.  The  march  was  toilsome  in  the  extreme. 
Their  baggage,  ammunition  and  provisions,  were  conveyed  in  boats, 


I  'XL  LA  SSIFIED  DA  7\  I  A  ND  MI  St  ELLA  NY.  42  5 

which  were  forced  up  the  rapid  current  with  great  labor,  and  had  often 
to  be  dragged  or  carried  past  unnavigable  rapids  or  across  the  water- 
sheds between  the  sources  of  one  stream  and  those  of  another.  On  the 
march,  Major  Bigelow,  in  order  to  make  out  their  route  more  clearly,  by 
the  view  from  its  summit,  climbed  the  high  mountain  which  still  bears 
his  name  in  Northern  Maine,  near  the  head-waters  of  the  Kennebec.  It 
is  a  monument  to  this  heroic  townsman  [Worcester]  of  ours,  grander 
and  more  lasting  than  any  ever  reared  by  human  hands. 

Arnold's  little  army  at  length  arrived  before  Quebec,  near  the  middle 
of  November,  having  suffered  terribly  from  cold,  as  well  as  from  hunger 
and  excessive  labor,  for  the  winter  sets  in  early  in  that  northern  region. 
The  town,  besides  its  great  natural  strength  of  position  and  its  formida- 
ble defensive  works,  had  a  garrison  exceeding  Arnold's  force  in  num- 
bers. With  admirable  impudence  he  sent  a  flag  of  truce,  demanding 
the  surrender  of  the  place.  But  the  commander  would  neither  sur- 
render nor  come  out  to  fight,  and  Arnold  did  not  see  his  way  to  getting 
in.  He  had,  moreover,  only  five  rounds  of  ammunition  for  each  man, 
and  was  therefore  in  no  condition  to  maintain  a  siege,  even  if  he  had 
force  enough  to  invest  the  town.  So  he  moved  up  the  river  twenty 
miles  or  more  to  await  the  orders  of  Montgomery,  who,  in  a  campaign 
of  extraordinary  brilliancy,  had  made  himself  master  of  the  Lake  Cham- 
plain  country,  the  Upper  St.  Lawrence  and  Montreal.  On  the  3d  of 
December  Montgomery  arrived  with  three  hundred  men,  some  artillery 
and  provisions,  and  what  Arnold's  men  needed  most,  a  supply  of  clothing 
suitable  for  the  season,  which  was  intensely  cold.  That  patriot  army, 
after  their  dreadful  march  through  the  Maine  and  Canadian  forests,  were 
barefooted  and  in  rags. 

Montgomery,  though  not  sanguine,  thought  there  was  a  chance  of 
success  in  attempting  to  storm  the  place  in  a  night  attack.  On  the  30th 
of  December  the  attempt  was  made,  one  party,  led  by  Montgomery  in 
person,  attacking  the  defences  of  the  lower  town  from  the  southeast, 
and  another,  under  Arnold,  assaulting  at  the  same  time  from  the  north- 
west. The  fall  of  Montgomery  at  the  head  of  his  column  by  the  first 
fire  from  the  enemy  put  an  end  to  the  attack  in  that  quarter.  Arnold's 
command,  with  which  were  Major  Bigelow,  Captain  Hubbard,  and  the 
Worcester  men,  had  at  first  better  success.  Arnold  was  disabled  by  a 
severe  wound  in  the  leg.  Capt.  Jonas  Hubbard  was  also  wounded  be- 
neath the  walls,  and  refusing  to  be  removed,  died  of  exposure  in  the 
fierce  snow-storm.  Major  Bigelow  and  some  two  hundred  others,  under 
the  command  of  Colonel  Christopher  Greene  of  Rhode  Island,  carried 
the  first  battery,  and  penetrated  so  far  into  the  town  that  their  retreat 
was  cut  off  and  they  were  compelled  to  surrender.    Sergeant  Silas  Wes- 


426 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY 


son  was  killed  and  Timothy  Rice  mortally  wounded  in  this  attack;  both 
were  Worcester  men.  Major  Bigelow  and  the  other  soldiers  from  this 
town  were  made  prisoners  and  held  in  captivity  until  November  of  the 
next  year. 

The  history  of  many  families  of  New  England  is  told  in  that  of  Cap- 
tain Hubbard.  His  ancestor,  hardy  and  enterprising,  went  out  from 
the  cultivated  country  to  redeem  new  tracts  from  the  waste.  The  father, 
animated  by  a  noble  patriotism,  exchanged  the  sickle  for  the  sword,  the 
peaceful  pursuits  of  agriculture  for  the  privations  of  military  life,  and 
died  the  death  of  a  hero  that  his  country  and  his  posterity  might  never 
know  the  oppression  of  monarchial  despotism. 

A  BATCH  OF  UNPLACED  AND  TARDY  DATA. 
Pennyslvania— Philadelphia— JOSIAH  HUBBARD,  b  1815,  m  Mary 

Moffat.     Children — George,  b  1850;  Henry,  b  1852,  and  Isabel,  b  1859. 

Vermont  and  Indiana— DAVID  HUBBARD,  m  Apl  18,  1811,  Susan 
Cone,  b  June  2,  1790,  in  Vermont,  d  in  Kalamazoo,  Mich.,  1881,  dau 
Enoch  and  Elizabeth  (Cook)  Cone,  and  had  Charlotte,  Franklin  and 
others. 

New  Hampshire— Manchester— THOMAS  HUBBARD  b  181 7,  m 
Jane  Davis.  Children— Anna,  b  1855,  and  Jane,  b  1857.  WILLIAM 
HUBBARD,  b  1819,  m  Harriet  Hoyt.  Children— William,  b  1S43; 
Harriet,  b  1847;  Martha,  b  1849,  and  Emma,  b  185 1.  Amherst — 
WILLIAM  HUBBARD,  b  181 8,  m  Elizabeth  Russell.  Children— 
Eugenie,  b  1865.  Wilmot— WILLIAM  HUBBARD,  d  s.  p.,  m  Harriet 
J.  Emery,  dau  Daniel  and  Rebecca  (Chase)  Emery. 

Maine—  BETSEY  HUBBARD  m  Nov  2,  1802,  Elder  James  Hooper, 
both  of  Paris,  Me.  STEPHEN  HUBBARD  m  Oct  8,  1818,  ELIZA- 
BETH HUBBARD,  both  of  South  Berwick;  also  DOMINICUS  HUB- 
BARD m  Nov  5,  1826,  Patty  Randall,  both  of  same  place.  Peaslee 
Hoyt,  b  Oct  23,  1749,  m  for  2d  wife  SARAH  HUBBARD  of  Readfield, 
Me.,  and  had  nine  children.  Peaslee  Hoyt  m  1774  MARGARET 
HUBBARD,  of  Readfield,  Me.,  b  Feb  2,  1755,  and  had  fourteen  children. 

Conn.,  New  Hampshire,  Vermont  and  Pain.— OLIVER  HUBBARD, 
b  Oct  30,  1747,  d  July  6,  1820,  m  (?),  b  1760,  d  May  6,  1837,  removed  from 
Connecticut  to  Hinsdale,  N.  H.  He  had  Oliver,  b  1779,  Lois,  b  1781, 
d  y;  Hiram,  b  1783,  went  to  Baribeau,  Wis.;  Vashti,  b  1785;  Esther,  b 

1787,  m  Capt.  Seth  Clark;  Heman,  b  1792;  Lois,  b  1794,  m Rich; 

Bashtina,  b  1796;  Seymour,  b  179S,  and  Orrin,  sixth  child,  b  1789,  d 
1873,  m  Mary  Butler,  b  1789,  d  1S83,  of  Chesterfield,  N.  H.,  rem  to  East 
Burk,  Vt.,  and  had  George  who  had  five  children,  James  (in  late  war), 
Mary  L.,  Sarah,  Miranda,  settled  in  Lyndonville,  Vt.,  Caroline,  who  m 


UNCLA  SSIFIED  DA  TA  A  ND  M ISC  EL  LA  N  Y.  4  2  - 

L.  C.  Aver  of  West  Burk,  and  Horace  R.,  who  m  Jennie  C.  Whitcomb  of 
Cambridge,  Vt.,  rem  to  Titusville,  Pa.,  and  had  Henry  Earl,  Helen 
Maud  and  Harriet  Louise.  OLIVER  had  a  brother  EPHRAIM  who 
had  Ruth,  m  William  Pierce;  Lucy,  m  Joel  Fletcher;  Jerusha,  m 
William  Ruggles;  Abigail,  unm;  Nathan  settled  in  Lyndon,  Vt.,  also 
Ephraim;  Charlotte  H.,  m  Abel  Fletcher,  and  Gratis,  m  John  Butler 
and  had  Otis. 

There  was  a  CALEB  HUBBARD,  possibly  a  captain  in  the  Rev. 
War,  who  had  a  son  Abijah,  b  in  Middletown  in  1755,  d  in  Hamilton, 
X.  V.,  in  1S25,  who  was  at  Bunker  Hill,  a  sergeant,  and  who  was  said 
to  have  refused  a  commission.  He  had  a  son  Abijah,  b  in  Middletown 
in  1794,  d  in  Sauquoit,  X.  Y.,  in  1868.  His  son,  George  Asahel,  was 
born  in  Sauquoit  in  1842,  served  faithfully  in  the  late  civil  war,  and 
now  resides  in  Xew  Haven,  Ct.  He  has  a  daughter,  Charlotte  Amelia, 
living  there  who  was  born  in  1879. 

EBER  HUBBARD  was  born  Aug  10,  1785,  and  died  Sep  22,  1S41. 
Feb  3,  1808,  he  married  Abigail  Rumble,  born  Apl  28,  17S9,  died  June 
23,  1843.  Children — Eliza  (b  Feb  14,  1809,  d  1891),  George  (b  July  6, 
181 1),  Eli  (b  Aug  18,  1813,  d  Dec,  1868,  m  May  20,  1846,  (1)  Georgianna 
Leach,  b  Sep  25,  1825,  d  Jan  27, 1852,  dau  Leverett  W.  and  Deborah  Leach 
of  Durham,  Ct.,  and  had  Edward  Melville,  b  Jan  12,  1S47,  lives  in  Wal- 
lingford,  and  Leverett  Marsdcn — see  Prominent  American  Hubbards. 
Eli  Hubbard  m  Aug  19,  1S59,  (2)  Cornelia  M.  Aldrich  of  Fulton,  X.  Y., 
and  had  Zuilee,  b  Mch  26,  1864,  m  Dr.  J.  T.  Barker,  D.  S.,  of  Walling- 
ford,  Ct.),  Diana  (b  Sep  14,  1815),  Betsey  (b  Oct  12,  1S17),  Ithamore  (b 
Dec  21,  1820),  Anna  W.  (b  Feb  25,  1822,  d  Sep  24,  1S23),  Anna  W.  (b 
Mch  20,  1S24,  d  June  19,  1843),  Hester  Ann  (b  June  24,  1826),  Phcebe  (b 
July  9,  1828),  Mary  (b  May  13,  1831)  and  Eber  (b  Oct  11,  1833,  m  June 
27,  1858,  Desire  G.  Cole,  b  May  6,  1840,  and  had  Walter  W.,b  July  2, 
1859;  MarsJiall  E.,  b  Dec  22,  i860;  Mary  I,  b  Feb  24,  1863,  d  Oct  23, 
1S71;  James  R.y  b  May  29,  1869,  Charles  E.,  b  Aug  27,  1874;  Eber  J.,  b 
Aug  13,  1876;  Edna  M,  b  Jan  17,  1879,  d  Oct  10,  1879;  Glenn  C,  b  Aug 
16,  1 88 1,  and  Allen  M.,  b  Dec  3,  1887). 

JESSE  HUBBARD,  b  Oct  17,  1767,  d  Apl  21,  1827,  m  Mch  8,  1791, 
Ruth  Reed,  b  Xov  11,  1773,  d  Mch  28, 1852.  Children — Harriet  (b  Dec 
7,  1792,  d  Apl  1,  1844),  Lavina  (b  July  31,  1794,  d  Aug  13,  1800),  AVil- 
i.iam  (b  Sep  12,  1798,  d  Aug  8,  1800),  Marilla  (b  Oct  13,  1801,  m  May 
14,  1844,  at  Lakeville,  Ct.,  David  Frisbie),  William  Xewton  (b  Sep  21, 

Kansas,  Bavaria.  A  correspondent  says,  in  the  line  of  descent  of  George  1620(9— Joseph  1643— John 
1678— Solomon  1714— Seth  1730— Austin  1795— Orlo  1831,  comes  the  following  (?)  in  Kansas  :  John  H.  of 
Great  Bend;  M.  C.  and  II.  M.,  bankeis  at  Belleville,  W.  L.  of  Talmo,  Thomas  S.  of  Glasco,  Orlo,  stock 
raiser,  Herman  H.,  druggist,  and  Wilder  D.,  physician,  all  of  Bavaria;  Jonathan  and  Carrie  A.  of 
Boston  Mills  and  F.  C.  of  Salina.  In  Dakota,  Royal  Prescott  of  Chamberlain  and  James  of  Hitchcock: 
also  Harvey  and  Loren  M.  of  Amboy,  Ohio. 


4^ 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 


1803,  d  Dec  6,  1822),  La vina  M.  (b  July  17,  1806,  d  Jan  2,  1882,  m  May 
18,  1831,  at  Salisbury,  Ct,  James  Welch,  b  Jan  7,  1807,  d  Nov  22,  18S6, 
and  had  Elizabeth  Louisa,  b  Aug  8,  1836,  d  Feb  2,  1849;  John  Berry,  b 
Sep  14,  1S38,  d  Mch  13,  1862;  William  Collin,  b  Mch  11,  1845;  Edward 
Myron,  b  Oct  1,  1848,  d  May  1,  1849;  and  Edward  Hubbard,  b  Mch  15, 
1852),  Horace  Edward  (b  June  4,  1809,  d  Apl  27, 1S52,  m  Jan  9,  1843,  at 
Norfolk,  Ct.,  Rosanna  W.  Butler  and  had  Ellen,  Hattic  and  Rose)  and 
Myron  R.  (b  Aug  1,  1S16,  d  Jan  30,  1848,  m  Nov  10,  1840,  Harriet  Mal- 
lory  and  had  William  and  Myron). 

Massachusetts— Falmouth— OCHRE,  b  1805,  Amherst  1829,  d  1852,  m 
Martha  Smith  and  had  Elizabeth,  b  1834;  Henry,  b  1835;  William,  b 
1837,  and  Matilda,  b  1839,  m  Franklin  Nash. 

HENRY  HUBBARD  of  Pittsfield,  b  1827,  m  Caroline  Barnes.  Chil- 
dren—Charles,  b  1856;  Minnie,  b  1857;  Frederic,  b  1859,  and  Frank, 
b  1863.  Boston— GEORGE  HUBBARD,  b  1S1S,  m  Diana  Rawson. 
Children— Melville,  b  1847,  m  Elvira  Winslow;  George,  b  1848,  and 
Franklin,  b  i860. 

DANIEL  HUBBARD,  youngest  of  seven  children  of  (?)  William 
Hubbard,  was  born  in  Brighton,  Mass.,  Oct  10,  1804,  and  died  in  Oxford, 
Mass.,  Feb  13,  1880.  He  learned  the  trade  of  clock  and  watchmaking, 
and  lived  at  various  periods  in  Medford,  Mass.,  Troy  and  Syracuse,  N. 
Y.,  Woonsocket,  Rhode  Island,  and  Oxford,  Mass.  His  eldest  brother 
was  named  WILLIAM,  who  settled  and  died  in  Weymouth,  Mass.    His 

sister  Elizabeth  married  an  India  missionary,  ( 1 )  Rev. Colman, 

and  (2)  Rev.  Amos  Sutton.    Mary  and  Emeline,  twins,  m Badger 

anc] Stowell.     Charles  became  an  architect.     John  C,  b  1S03,  d 

abt  1877,  m  and  had  four  children.  DANIEL  HUBBARD  married 
Sep  21,  1834,  Sarah  Wheeler  Hewett,  and  had  a  daughter  Mary,  who  m 
Johnson,  who  is  now  living  in  Oxford,  Mass. 

WILLIAM  HUBBARD  of  Braintree,  Mass.,  b  1764  (whose  father's 

name  was  also  supposed  to  have  been  William  Hubbard),  m and 

had  sons  Daniel;  William  who  had  Sheldon  and  Charles;  John  who  had 
Philena,  Anna,  Capin,  and  Gorham;  and  Charles  of  Brighton,  Mass.,  b 
1  So  1,  d  in  Boston  1876,  was  State  Senator  of  Massachusetts  at  one  time, 
also  an  artist  of  some  little  fame,  and  was  said  to  have  worked  as  a  boy 
upon  the  fortifications  of  Boston  during  the  War  of  1S12.  He  married 
Amelia  Jane  Ripley  (descended  from  th«  Ripleys  of  Hingham,  Mass.), 
and  had  Lillian,  who  d  unm;  Ellen,  who  m  Rufus  S.  Frost,  M.  C,  State 
Senator  Mass.,  also  Mayor  of  Chelsea,  and  had  Osgood,  Emma,  Charles 
Hubbard,  Rufus,  Ellen  and  Albert;  Jane  Amelia,  who  m  Moses  A.  Her- 
rich  and  had  Amelia,  James  Amory,  Rufus  Frost,  William  and  Charles 
Hubbard;  Abigail,  who  m  Richard  Haskell  and  had  Alice;  Charles  (see 


UNCLA  SSIFIED  DA  TA  A  ND  MIS  L  EL  LA  NY.  429 

following),  and  Florence,  who  m  Courtlandt  E.  Hastings  and  had  Lillian 
and  Alice.  CHARLES  HUBBARD  was  born  in  Boston,  Mass.,  Jan  3, 
1835,  and  married  Nov  7,  1866,  Martha  J.  Pack,  descended  from  the  old 
Bancker  family  of  New  York  City.  Children — Charles  Dunlap  (b  in  New 
York  City  May  3,  1S68,  engaged  there  in  business,  but  residing  in  Brook  - 
lyn,  m  1891  Gertrude  Robbins  Pitcher  and  had  Charles  Pitcher,  b  in 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Jan  22,  1893)  and  Florence  Hastings  (b  July  26,  1S71). 

Dolly  Ann  Cowles,  b  1818,  Westfield,  Mass.,  m  EZRA  HUBBARD. 

New  York— Brooklyn— SAMUEL  HUBBARD,  b  1830,  m  Adeline 
Lippincote.  Children — Franklin,  b  1S61;  George,  b  1864;  Ellen,  b 
1S68;  and  Frederick,  b  1871.  MARTIN  HUBBARD,  b  1832,  m  Mary 
Warner.     Children — Josephine,  b  1870,  and  Martin,  b  1876. 

Shubal  Cowles,  b  1798,  m  SARAH  HUBBARD,  and  lived  at  Candia, 
N.  Y.  Robert  Lansing  of  New  York,  b  Feb  2,  1799,  m  (1)  MARIA 
HUBBARD  and  (2)  CORNELIA  HUBBARD. 

JAMES  HUBBARD  (whose  father  was  James  Hubbard)  had  James 
Frank,  Mary  A.  and  Joseph  A.,  who  were  all  born  in  Scott  County,  N. 
Y.  Joseph  A.  Hubbard  was  born  Mch  29,  1830,  and  married  Sep  22, 
1858,  Charlotte  E.  Robertson  and  had  William  C,  b  Oct  15,  1S66,  m  Jan 
15,  1S95,  Mabel  L.  Potter;  and  Frank  James,  b  Feb  24,  1868. 

THOMAS  HUBBARD  of  Mattituck,  Suffolk  County,  N.  Y„  had 
Harriet  Hubbard,  who  m  abt  1808  Asa  Mapes,  son  of  Thomas,  son  of 
Jonathan  of  Southold  or  Cutchogue,  Long  Island,  and  had  Ulysses,  b  abt 
1810,  d  y;  Cecelia  Ann,  b  Oct  12,  181 2,  d  Oct  21,  1894,  m  Benjamin  Hor- 
ton  of  Cutchogue;  Elizabeth  Cornelia,  b  Sep  22,  1S14,  d  Apl  16,  1878, 
unm;  John  Palmer,  b  Aug  11,  1816,  d  Apl  7,  1857,  unm;  Wines  Hubbard, 
b  18 18,  d  at  18  mos;  William  Caleb,  b  Mch  6,  1820,  living  at  Cutchogue, 
unm;  and  Harriet  Sophia,  b  Aug  8,  1822,  d  Aug  8,  186S,  unm. 

Dr.  ROBERT  HUBBARD  married  Cornelia  Hartwell  and  had  Sophie 
Todd  Hubbard,  b  Nov  1  r,  1864,  m  Feb  1,  1SS3,  Charles  Marvin  Everest, 
widower,  b  in  Buffalo  Township,  Portage  County,  Wisconsin,  Oct  25, 
1852.  They  reside  in  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  where  Mr.  Everest  is  well  known 
as  the  Yice-President  and  Treasurer  of  the  Vacuum  Oil  Company,  which 
has  large  works  at  Rochester  and  Olean.  Mr.  Everest's  first  wife  was 
Jessie  Wilson,  dau  of  P.  Strong  and  Edna  (Chapman)  Wilson,  by  whom 
he  had  Raymond  Wilson  and  Jessie  Hiram.  Children  (by  Sophie  Todd 
Hubbard)— Ruth  Hartwell  (b  Sep  6,  1889,  in  Rochester,  N.  Y.),  Janet 
Cornelia  (b  Mch  1,  1S91,  in  Rochester)  and  Sherman  Hubbard  (b  Dec  2, 
1892,  in  Rochester). 

JOSEPH  HUBBARD  came  from  Connecticut  to  Steuben  County,  N. 
Y.,  and  then  removed  to  Sherman,  N.  Y.,  near  the  Penn.  State  line.  He 
had  sons  Joseph  A.  (b   1S22,  d  Apl  8.  1S77),  who  lived  at  "Hubbard's 


43o  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

Corners,"  Sherman,  N.  Y.,  and  had  two  daughters  and  two  sons,  viz., 
Charles,  b  Nov  18,  1843,  in  Sherman,  engaged  in  insurance  business,  m 
Nov  18,  1868,  (1)  Lucy  A.  McClintock,  d  Dec  16,  1870,  m  (2)  Sarah  E. 
White  of  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  and  had  Jerry  W.  and  Frank  A.;  and  John, 
b  abt  1845,  farmer,  lives  at  Sherman,  has  wife  and  two  daughters),  and 
Nathaniel  (b  abt  1825,  d  abt  1885,  m  and  had  six  children,  one  of  whom, 
Henry,  was  killed  in  the  army,  and  another,  George  IV.,  lives  at  Panama, 
N.  Y,  hotel  keeper).  JOSEPH  HUBBARD  had  a  brother,  NA- 
THANIEL HUBBARD,  who  went  to  Fredonia,  N.  Y.,  and  afterward 

rem  to  Sherman  and  followed  farming.     He  m  Harriet and  had 

six  children,  viz.,  Henry  H.,  farmer;  William  H.,  farmer;  Horace, 
deceased;  James  F.,  and  two  others,  names  unknown,  one  rem  to  Brad- 
ford, Pa. 

JOHN  HUBBARD,  b  abt  1736,  on  the  18th  June,  lived  at  Chatham, 
Ct.  He  had  a  sister,  and  a  brother  named  Ezra,  possibly  a  minister,  also 
a  cousin  named  Seth.  In  1792  he  rem  with  his  wife  Anna,  b  1737,  d  Dec, 
1803,  and  two  children,  upon  an  ox  sled,  to  a  wilderness  in  New  York 
State,  now  called  Burlington  Flats,  and  died  there  in  March,  1836. 
Children — Olive  (who  m  Elisha  Johnson  and  had  Alfred,  Olive,  and 
Irene),  Samuel  (who  m  Mercy  Lewis  and  had  Elijah,  Julia,  Asenaih, 
Hester,  Philcna,  and  Lester)  and  Elijah  (b  June  12,  1769,  d  Oct  15, 
1815,  m  Sep  22,  1788,  Phebe  Johnson,  b  Jan  22,  1772,  d  Jan  2,  1873,  and 
had  Serena,  who  m  Jared  Johnson  and  had  Albert,  Samuel,  Elijah,  La- 
vinia,  Norman,  Jordan,  Horace  and  Julia;  Levi,  who  m  Margaret  Day 
and  had  Phebe  Ann  and  Susan;  Lavinia  who  m  Russell  Day  and  had 
Fanny,  Phebe,  Eri  Hubbard,  Chauncey,  Philetus,  Volney,  Athburton,  and 
Polona;  Eri,  b  June  23,  1798,  d  Mch  12,  1864,  m  Jan  5,  1820,  Electa  Fitch, 
b  Jan  18,  1799,  d  Mch  13,  1855,  and  had  Bulia  F.,  b  Feb  13,  1821,  m  Jan 
9,  1845,  Stephen  Shaul,  b  July  28,  1817,  d  Mch  23,  1892,  and  had  five 
children;  Julia  J.,  b  Feb  13,  1821,  m  Johnson  Shaul,  b  Mch  30,  1822,  and 
had  three  children;  George  Henry,  b  Feb  16,  1823,  m  Jan  4,  1848,  Mary 
Wilber  and  had  George;  Dyar  J.,  b  July  26,  1825,  d  Sep  19,  1889,  m  Dec 
16,  1S57,  Emily  Shaul,  b  Oct  6,  1836,  d  Sep  20,  1862;  Elijah  N.,  b  June 
15,  1S29,  d  June  18,  1859;  Mary  S.,  b  June  15,  1829,  m  Eusebius  Giles 
and  had  Hurlburt;  Jackson  A.,  b  Oct  30,  1833,  physician,  m  Phebe 
Dyer  and  had  Tessa;  and  Judson  N.  B.,  b  Oct  30,  1833,  d  Mch  29, 
1885,  m  Arville  Byer  and  had  Electa;  Cclinda,  who  m  George  R. 
Hall  and  had  Hermanus,  Jared,  Maria,  Henry,  George,  Mary,  and 
Franklin;  Beulah  who  m  Daniel  Fitch  and  had  German,  Levansy 
and  Gertrude;  Jared  who  m  Betsey  Parker  and  had  Judiah  and  Otis; 
and  Drueilla,  who  m  Elisha  Parker  and  had  Mary,  Sarah,  Maria, 
Leroy  and  Elijah). 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY.  431 

THE  PRETTY  QUAKER'S  CALL. 
Philadelphia  boasts  probably  of  the  prettiest  Quaker  girls  in .the 
world      Twenty  years  or  more  ago  there  dwelt  at  the  corner  of  Chestnu 

I  a streets  a  certain  dealer  in  cheese  and  batter  by  the  name  of 

Ephraim  Pront.     He  had  made  a  fortune  in  the  trade  and  was  widely 
respected      His  aged  mother  was  one  of  those  distinguished  personages 
who  take'their  seats  upon  the  platform  in  the  meeting  houses,  and  oc- 
casionally-say  once  in  six  months  or  so-have  "  a  call  to  speak.       His 
vff «  an  industrious  body,  as  young  looking  as  her  own  daughter 
As  for  that  daughter,  words  can  not  describe  her.     Nature,  in  pity  for 
the  prejudice  which  doomed  her  to  wear  sad-hued  garments  all  her  We 
had  showered  upon  her  all  the  brilliant  tints  upon  her  palette.     Friend 
Ephraim's  daughter  was  fair  to  look  upon.     Perhaps  she  knew  it,  to 
she  had  a  looking-glass,  but  not  one  word  of  flattery  had  she  ever  heard. 
So   week  after  week,  first  day,  found  Bessy  at  meeting;  second  da,, 
busy  with  household  affairs,  while  her  mother  supermtended  the  wash- 
ing: third  day,  ironing;  fourth  day,  baking,  and  so  on  till  the  seven 
were  recounted.  . 

She  was  24-twenty-four  and  not  married.     Had  you  asked  Friend 
Hannah  Pront  why,  she  would  have  said:  "  My  daughter  does  not  ye 
bale  bread  as  I  could  wish,  and  I  can  not  allow  her  to  marry  until  that 
is  well  learned."     Young  men  who  saw  Bessy  at  the  meeting  or  in  her 
ather's  store  were  not  so  calmly  indifferent.     More  than  one  Quaker 
yontn,  with  a  pleasant  appreciation  of  Bessy's  beauty  and  thrifty  com 
^deration  of  her  father's  wealth,  were,  like  Barkis,  '  willing.       But  on 
one  of  them  did  the  paternal  eye  fall  with  favor.     Ephraim _Pront  and 
his  wife  Hannah  had  already  selected  a  husband  for  their  child     That 
husband  to  be  was  one  Peter  Potter,  a  widower  of  4°,  who  talked  and 
occasionally  preached,  and  owned  three  blocks  of  Arch  street  property, 
o    •■   quares  •' in  the  prance  of  the  Philadelphia^    Bessy  had  not  been 
consulted.     Often  she  acquiesced  in  the  maternal  opinion  that  Friend 
Peter  was  a  worthy  man.     And  probably  she  would  have  acquiesced  in 
^e  opnTonthathl  was  the  proper  husband  to  select  when  the  time 
ame  but  for  one  unlucky  circumstance.    About  the  middle  o _Decenit ,  r 
just  when  Bessie's  loaves  were  beginning  to  merit  approval.  Sehna  Grief 
'was  married.     After  passing  meeting  and  going  through  the  other  cere 
monies,  the  new-made  couple  gave  a  housewarnimg,  and  thither,  of 
course/went  Bessy,  Bessy's  mother  and  father,  and  Friend  Pete,. 

Thither  also  came  a  young  man  of  the  world's  people,  one  Mr.  John 
Hubbard,  who  wore  a  black  coat,  a  pair  of  patent  leather  boots  and  a 
stovepipe  hat,  and  who  was  regarded  by  the  youthful  Friends  with  feel- 


„72  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

ings  of  mingled  admiration  and  terror.  Of  course,  there  was  neithei 
singing  or  dancing,  but  they  played,  the  forfeits  being  generally  kisses 
Mr.  Hubbard  enjoyed  himself  amazingly.  He  managed  to  kiss  Bessy 
oftener  than  any  one  else,  and  that  night  walked  home  with  her.  Ques- 
tioned by  her  mother,  Bessy  answered:  "  I  thought  it  but  right  to  allow 
him  lest  he  should  think  Friends  proud."  So  maternal  solicitude  was 
put  at  rest,  and  few  impressions  were  awakened  by  the  fact  that  Mr. 
John  Hubbard  took  an  immense  interest  in  butter  and  cheese,  conversed 
with  Friend  Ephraim  on  those  subjects  with  great  animation  when  they 
encountered  each  other  at  that  Friend's  store,  and  managed  to  be  invited 
home  to  tea  because  he  really  could  not  leave  Friend  Ephraim  until  he 
quite  comprehended  the  advantages  of  the  new  patent  churn. 

One  evening  Hannah  cut  the  loaf,  and  smiling,  turned  to  her  daughter 
and  said:  "  Bessy,  thee  makes  bread  as  well  as  thy  mother."  That  after- 
noon was  one  to  be  remembered.  The  time  had  come  when  Friend 
Peter  Potter  might  be  gratified.  His  wife  was  ready  for  him.  A  con- 
ference was  held  between  the  father  and  the  anxious  widower  respecting 
Bessy's  pecuniary  prospects  should  her  future  spouse  die  first,  and  the 
courtship  commenced. 

The  three  sat  before  the  fire— Ephraim  twiddling  his  thumbs,  Hannah 
darning  stockings,  "  the  child,"  Bessy,  knitting.     Ephraim  began: 

"  Bessy." 

>l  Yes,  father." 

"  Thee  are  fit  to  manage  a  house  of  thy  own." 

"  I  think  so,  father." 

"  In  fact,  it  is  time  thee  should  marry.' 

•'Yes,  father,  I  have  been  thinking  so  myself." 

"I  am  sorry  to  hear  thee  say  that,  my  child,"  cried  Hannah.  "A 
young  girl  should  not  think  of  such  a  matter  until  suggested  by  her 
parent  or  some  wise  friend." 

Bessy  looked  down  abashed. 

"  Only  last  week  a  friend  spoke  to  me  of  the  matter." 

"  What  friend  ?  Good  Sarah  Rose,  doubtless;  she  is  ever  for  having 
women  marry  betimes." 

"No,  mother,  not  Friend  Rose." 

"  Perhaps  thy  Aunt  Eliza."  ' 

'•  No,  mother." 

"  Who  was  it,  child  ?" 

"  Friend  John  Hubbard." 

"  Friend — John  Hubbard  !" 

"  Yes,  mother.  He  spoke  of  thinking  well  of  me  and  suggesting  that 
our  lives  would  be  passed  happily  together." 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AX D  MISCELLANY.  ,,, 

"  Bessy,  thee  knows  a  female  Friend  may  not  marry  a  young  man  of 
the  world's  people.  Christie  Brown  was  read  out  of  meeting  for  so 
doing." 

"  Yes,  mother." 

"  Well,  child,  since  the  time  has  come  for  thee  to  marry,  thee  will  be 
glad  to  know  that  Friend  Peter  is  anxious  for  a  wife,  and  prefers  thee." 

Bessy  turned  pale. 

"  Friend  Peter  is  worth  a  lot  of  money." 

"  Yes,  father." 

"  Also,  he  is  a  Friend." 

"Yes,  father." 

"  Consequently  thee  had  better  marry  him.  It  is  now  time  for  thee 
to  retire.     Good-night,  Bessy." 

"  Good-night,"  said  Bessy,  with  a  trembling  lip. 

So  it  was  settled.  It  never  entered  into  any  one's  heart  that  Bessy 
was  not  used  tenderly.  And  the  days  hurried  on,  one  after  the  other, 
toward  the  first  day,  on  which  the  twain  were  to  "  pass  meeting"  for  the 
first  time,  preparatory  to  the  solemnization  of  their  nuptials.  It  was 
Friday.  All  the  week  Bessy  had  been  a  little  sad,  not  quite  herself. 
The  extremely  fine  fabric  of  her  muslin  dress  did  not  seem  to  interest 
her  as  it  should  have  done.  At  2  she  came  to  her  mother.  "  I  have 
some  little  business  to  attend  to  in  Fairmount,"  she  said.  "  And  I  have 
been  thinking  it  would  be  a  pleasant  thing  if  Friend  Peter  could  drive 
me  there  in  his  leathern  conveyance."  So  Friend  Peter  was  summoned. 
The  light  wagon  was  brought  out,  and  away  they  drove.  Peter  dis- 
coursed volubly.  Bessy  answered  quietly.  At  last  the  wire  bridge  was 
crossed  and  Fairmount  lay  before  them.  When  this  was  in  sight  Bessy 
spoke: 

"Friend  Peter,  thee  sees  that  white  building  with  white  shutters?" 

"  Aye,  verily  do  I." 

"  Thee  will  oblige  me  by  taking  this  package  and  deliver  it  to  Friend 
Ann,  with  my  good  wishes.  Meanwhile  I  will  hold  the  reins;  I  do  not 
wish  to  alight." 

Friend  Peter  obediently  took  the  package  and  departed.  He  stayed 
ten  minutes.  When  he  returned,  horse,  wagon,  and  lady  love  were 
gone.  He  rushed  about  distractedly.  No  one  had  seen  anything.  Peter 
waddled  home.     They  were  not  there.     The  Quaker  mother  said: 

"  Be  not  alarmed;  they  will  return  soon." 

But  the  day  passed  with  no  sign.  So  did  Saturday.  At  10  o'clock 
Saturday  evening  a  noise  of  wheels  was  heard.  Rushing  out  they 
found  the  wagon,  a  mulatto  boy,  and  a  note,  but  no  Bessy.  In  terrible 
anxiety  they  tore  open  the  missive.     It  was  as  follows: 


434 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Dear  Parents  and  Respected  Friend  Peter: 

I  hope  you  have  not  been  alarmed.  I  am  well.  Mother  knows,  I  presume,  that  it  would  not  be 
easy  to  marry  if  one  felt  no  call  to  do  so.  I  had  no  call  to  be  united  to  Friend  Peter.  I  had  a  call  to 
marry  John.  There  is  no  need  of  the  ceremony  of  passing  meeting  among  world's  people,  so  I  am 
already  Friend  Hubbard. 

Suggest  to  Friend  Peter  the  worthy  Ann  Billings  as  a  wife.    She  is  a  better  housewife  than  I.    And 

let  me  know  soon  that  I  may  be  forgiven,  for  I  am  in  grief  on  account  of  your  alarm  and  annoyance. 

Your  loving  daughter, 

Bessie  Hubbard. 

Friend  Ephraim  twisted  his  thumbs,  Friend  Hannah  folded  her  hands, 
Friend  Peter  opened  his  eyes  and  mouth  and  shook  his  head  slowly.  At 
length  Hannah  said: 

"Call  my  mother,  Ephraim." 

Ephraim  brought  the  old  lady  down  stairs.  Nobody  said  a  word — 
not  one.  They  gave  her  the  note.  She  read,  folded  it,  put  her  spec- 
tacles on  the  table  and  sat  quiet — fifteen  minutes,  half  an  hour,  an  hour 
Then  she  arose  and  said: 

"  I  have  a  call  to  speak.  When  the  prodigal  son  returned  the  father 
killed  the  fatted  calf.  Bessy  is  a  naughty  child;  but  verily  she  deserves 
forgiveness." 

And  Bessy  was  forgiven.  Two  weeks  later  Peter  married  Widow 
Ann,  and  Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  Hubbard  were  guests  at  the  wedding — 
Yankee  Blade. 


OLD    DAVID    HUBBARD    HOMESTEAD 

AT    CHARLESTOWN,  N.  H. 

(Built  in  177.".) 


CHARLES    PUTNAM    HUBBARD 
HOMESTEAD    IN  CUSTER  CO.,  NEB. 
(Built  in  1891.) 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY. 


435 


CJ 


JA.MEs    HUBBARD THE    CENTENAR1.1N. 

THE  HUBBARD  CAPACITY  FOR  LONGEVITY. 

JAMES  HUBBARD  was  born  in  Sussex  County,  Delaware,  near  the 
Maryland  line,  March  27,  17S5,  and  died  at  Mapleton,  Marion  County, 
Ind.,  April  29,  1S91,  aged  106  years,  1  month  and  2  days.  His  father, 
John  Hubbard,  was  born  in  1748  and  died  in  Dearborn  County,  near 
Wellington,  Indiana,  in  1848,  aged  100  years.  His  grandfather  died  at 
the  age  of  105  years.  His  sister,  Mrs.  William  Glenn  of  Cincinnati, 
<  >hio,  died  aged  100  years.  Several  others  in  the  family  have  lived  to 
ver  90. 

When  JAMES  HUBBARD*  was  five  years  of  age  his  father  removed 
from  Delaware  to  Orange  County,  North  Carolina,  where  JAMES  mar- 
ried in  1809  Mary  Thomas  (b  Nov  28,  178S,  d  Apl  1,  1865").  Living  in 
North  Carolina  but  a  short  period,  the  young  couple  removed  to  Leb- 
anon, Ohio,  and  in  181 1  to  Dearborn  County  (then  Indiana  Territory), 
Indiana,  where  his  father  had  entered  land.  In  1S33  he  sold  his  posses- 
sions and  took  up  a  quarter  section  (160  acres)  in  Marion  County,  then 
an  unbroken  wilderness,  where  he  lived  the  balance  of  his  life.     During 

*  Some  of  the  members  of  this  family  spell  the  name  Hubbartt  and  others  Hubbardt. 


436  HUBBARD  HIS  TOR  Y  AND  GENE  A  L  OG 1  \ 

the  war  of  1812  he  was  employed  as  a  ranger  or  scout  m  Capt.  William 
Spencer's  Co.,  Col.  Dill's  command.  For  these  services  he  received  a 
pension  of  $96  per  annum  from  our  grateful  government,  commencing 
in  1884,  seventy  years  after  the  service  was  rendered.  At  the  age  of  S3 
he  became  blind  from  a  painful  cataract  that  formed  in  both  eyes.  This 
interrupted  his  reading  and  so  annoyed  him  that  he  determined  at  87  to 
have  an  operation,  which,  happily,  was  successful,  and  he  enjoyed  again 
reading  his  books  and  newspapers.  At  100  years  he  had  teeth  enough 
to  chew  his  food,  worked  daily  in  the  garden  digging  potatoes,  and  made  a 
new  garden  gate.  For  a  little  variation  he  would  step  over  to  see  his 
son  Richard,  who  lived  four  miles  away. 

The  old  gentleman  was  an  ardent  Republican,  and  never  faltered  in 
his  allegiance  from  the  party's  birth  to  his  death;  he  never  used  tobacco, 
and  had  stiff  opinions  on  temperance  matters.  Feeling  a  little  unwell 
one  day  after  passing  the  centenary  mark,  the  doctor  was  sent  for,  to 
whom  he  paid  no  attention  whatever  when  questioned  about  his  condi- 
tion, answering  his  queries  with  remarks  about  what  the  party  should 
do  upon  the  temperance  question.  Though  ardent  in  politics  he  could 
never  be  induced  to  hold  office,  and  used  a  couplet  from  Shakespeare  to 
temper  the  quality  of  his  refusal: 

Give  me  a  staff  of  honor  for  mine  age, 
But  not  a  scepter  to  control  the  world. 

JAMES  HUBBARD  was  an  exemplary  member  of  the  Methodist 
Church,  joining  it  in  1866,  and  was  buried  by  its  rites,  Rev.  J.  G.  Chaffee 
officiating.  His  text  was:  "  Cast  me  not  off  in  the  time  of  old  age;  for- 
sake me  not  when  my  strength  faileth."  The  pall-bearers  were  mem- 
bers of  the  Tippecanoe  Club,  seven  in  number,  of  which  he  was  the  old- 
est member,  and  all  were  past  three  score  and  ten.  In  1885  he  had  living 
five  children,  forty-nine  grandchildren,  seventy-four  great-grandchildren, 
and  ten  great-great-grandchildren.  A  picture  showing  five  of  the  gen- 
erations together  once  appeared  in  one  of  the  Indiana  papers.  JAMES 
HUBBARD  and  Nancy  Thomas  had  ten  children.  Solomon,  the  oldest, 
removed  to  Davis  County,  Iowa;  Richard  remained  at  Mapleton,  Ind.; 
Charles  went  to  Lincoln,  Neb.;  Elizabeth  married  Thomas  Record  of 

Indianapolis;  Jane  m Berry  of  Mapleton;  James  Robinson,  the 

youngest,  was  born  May  18,  1829,  and  died  Aug  31,  1864.  He  was  a 
member  of  Co.  D,  3d  Regt.  Missouri  Cavalry,  and  married  March  5,  1S54, 
Mary  C.  Emerson  of  Pike  County,  Missouri,  and  had  a  son,  b  Sep  1, 
1858,  dy;  Susie,  b  Nov  21,  1S60,  m  W.  H.  Myers  of  Louisville,  Lincoln 
County,  Mo;  and  Kate,  b  Oct  5,  1864. 

The  following  from  an  Indianapolis  paper  about  him  is  so  full  of  his- 
torical knowledge  that  it  is  herewith  reproduced: 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY. 


437 


When  JAMES  HUBBARD,  who  died  at  his 
home  near  this  city  Wednesday  night,  was  burn, 
■  III  was  king  of  England.  Louis  XVI  and 
Marie  Antoinette  still  had  their  heads  on  their 
shoulders,  ana  carried  the  aforesaid  heads  very 
high  at  Versailles  and  the  Elysee.  The  declaration 
of  independence  was  only  nine  years  old;  the 
French  revolution  was  still  in  the  womb  of  the 
future.  The  thirteen  feeble  commonwealths  which 
had  but  just  wrested  independence  from  George  III. 
were  loosely  bound  by  the  rope  of  sand  known  as 
the  •'  Articles  of  Confederation."  The  Continental 
Congress,  rapidly  becoming  an  object  of  popular 
contempt  and  derision,  was  making,  at  long  inter- 
vals, impotent  decrees  at  New  York.  Indiana  was 
a  practically  unknown  and  unexplored  part  i  f  the 
vast  territory  of  Virginia.  The  organization  of  the 
Northwest  territory  was  two  years  distant.  Four 
years  were  to  pass  before  the  Constitution  of  the 
United  States  would  be  framed.  George  Wash- 
ington was  living  the  life  of  a  Virginia  planter  at 
Mt.  Vernon.  Pitt  and  Fox  were  the  ruling  spirits  in 
England.  Edmund  Burke  had  but  just  completed 
his  great  parliamentary  career.  Ireland  i.ad  a 
parliament  of  her  own  and  Flood  and  Grattan  were 
making  College  Green  classic  with  their  wit  and 
their  eloquence.  Napoleon  Bonaparte  was  a  young 
lieutenant  of  artillery  at  Valence.  Andrew  Jackson 
was  sowing  wild  oats  in  North  Carolina.  Von 
Moltke  and.  William  I.  were  not  yet  born. 

It  was  a  wonderful  century  which  was  spanned 
by  JAMES  HUBBARD'S  life.  He  saw  the  rise 
and  fall  of  dynasres;  the  dawn  of  republicanism  in 
the  western  world  and  its  extension  over  a  large 
share  of  the  fairest  part  of  the  earth's  surface;  he 
saw  half  a  dozen  reconstructions  of  the  map  of 
Europe;  he  saw  the  downfall  of  the  ancient  regime 
in  France,  the  great  revolution,  the  advent  of  the 
man  on  horseback  in  the  person  of  Napoleon,  a 
continent  drenched  in  blood  to  quench  his  am- 
bition, Waterloo,  St.  Helena,  Louis  XVIII,  Charles 
X.  Louis  Philippe,  184S,  the  republic,  Louis  Napo- 
leon, the  empire,  Sedan,  the  commune,  the  republic. 
He  saw  England  transformed  by  a  peaceful  revo- 
lution from  a  government  by  kings  into  a  govern- 
ment by  the  people.  He  saw  the  Irish  parliament 
wiped  out  and  almost  a  hundred  years  of  futile 
struggle  for  its  restoration.  He  was  ten  years  old 
when  Warren  Hastings  was  acquitted  of  high 
crimes  and  misdemeanors,  and  twenty  years  old 
when  Nelson  fell  at  Trafalgar.  He  saw  the  ex- 
tinction of  Poland,  the  ancient  Chinese  wall  partly 
battered  down  by  the  western  powers,  the  admis- 
sion of  Japan  into  the  great  family  of  civilized  na- 
tions, the  re-creation  of  Italy,  the  unification  of 
Germany,  the  dismemberment  of  Turkey,  Spain  a 
republic-  for  a  day— and  once  again  the  despair  of 


Europe.  He  was  three  years  old  when  the  first 
permanent  English  settlement  was  made  in  Aus- 
tralia, and  he  lived  to  see  the  commonwealths  of 
that  great  continent  united  in  a  federation  destined 
to  play  an  important  part  in  the  drama  of  human- 
ity. He  saw  one  after  another  of  the  Spanish 
American  states  throw  off  their  allegiance  to  the 
parent  country,  and  when  he  died  there  was  not  a 
crowned  head  in  all  the  western  hemisphere. 

In  this  country  what  marvelous  transformations 
did  he  witness!  When  he  was  born  there  were  four 
millions  of  people  in  the  United  States;  he  died 
leaving  sixty-five  millions.  He  found  thirteen 
states;  he  left  forly-tvvo.  The  largest  town  in  the 
country  had  less  than  20.000  inhabitants  when  he 
first  opened  his  eyes;  when  he  finally  closed  them 
there  were  twenty-eight  cities  of  over  100,000  in- 
habitants each,  and  three  of  over  a  million.  He 
was  eighteen  when  Jefferson  added  the  magnificent 
domain  of  Louisiana  to  the  national  territory;  he 
was  thirty  when  Jackson  prevailed  at  New  Orleans 
and  Wellington  at  Waterloo.  He  was  a  middle- 
aged  man  when  Andrew  Jackson  suppressed  the 
nullitiers;  he  was  six  years  beyond  the  allotted 
three  score  and  ten  when  Ft.  Sumter  was  tired 
upon;  he  was  four  score  when  Grant  received  Lee's 
sword  at  Appomattox! 

But  JAMES  HUBBARD  saw  more  wonderful 
things  during  his  lifetime  than  the  birth  of  nations, 
the  creation  of  dynasties,  the  fall  of  thrones.  He 
saw  the  whole  face  of  civilization  changed.  He 
saw  a  complete  revolution  in  the  industrial  sys- 
tems of  the  world.  He  saw  the  passing  away  of  an 
old  social  order  and  the  birth  of  a  new  one.  He 
saw  the  application  to  a  myriad  of  practical  uses  of 
great  natural  forces  whose  potentialities  had  been 
unsuspected  by  all  the  generations  of  man  from  the 
beginning  The  lucifer  match,  illuminating  gas, 
the  sewing  machine,  the  reaper  and  mower,  the 
cotton  gin,  the  steamship,  the  railway,  the  tele- 
graph, the  printing  press,  the  telephone,  the  elec- 
tric light,  the  phonograph— indeed  almost  all  of  the 
most  familiar  and  useful  agencies  of  our  modern 
civilization  had  not  been  dreamed  of  when  JAMES 
HUBBARD  was  born,  and  he  was  approaching  the 
century  limit  when  some  of  the  most  important 
among  them  were  introduced.  The  world  which 
this  old  man  left  the  other  day  differed  more  widely 
in  all  the  features  of  material  civilization  from  the 
world  as  he  found  it  than  did  that  world  from  the 
world  of  Caesar  and  Alexander.  Indeed,  it  would 
be  hard  to  recognize  this  jolly  old  planet  of  ours 
as  the  same  one  that  was  gayly  whirling  through 
space  on  March  27, 1785,  when  J  AMES  HUBBARD 
dropped  down  upon  it  from  the  realm  of  mystery 
for  a  little  sojourn  of  one  hundred  and  six  years. 


438  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

SAMUEL  HUBBARD  and  his  wife,  Lucy  Wheeler,  were  born  in 
Massachusetts.  They  had  a  son,  Simon  S.,  who  was  born  in  Paris,  N.Y., 
Apl  30,  1800.  He  married  in  New  York  State  Jan  29,  1893,  Eunice 
Sterns,  b  Oct  7,  1804,  at  Leyden,  Mass.,  dau  Charles  and  Sarah  (Xorris) 
Sterns.  In  the  Spring-  of  1834  they  migrated  to  Ohio,  via  Buffalo,  Sim<  »n 
driving  the  team  while  the  family  traveled  by  boat  upon  the  canal,  the 
distance  altogether  amounting  to  380  miles.  They  settled  May  2,  1834, 
in  a  dense  forest  (now  Windsor,  Ohio),  but  shortly  removed  to  Harts 
Grove,  the  present  homestead  of  the  family.  Children — Albert  S.  (b 
May  3,  1824,  m  Nov  6,  1845,  Clementine  Roff,  d  1S68,  and  had  E.  C, 
Emma,  Jennie  and  Frank),  N orris  S.  (b  Apl  14,  1826,  m  Nov  5,  1845, 
Marinda  Olin  and  had  Lucy,  George,  Edgar,  Ernest,  William,  Lyman, 
Simon,  Albert,  Elgiva,  and  Mary),  Caroline  (b  Sep  13,  1828,111  Oct  14, 
1849,  Alonzo  Olin,  and  had  Ella,  Julia,  Orrin,  Eunice,  Ward,  Elgiva,  and 
Clara),  George  A.  (b  Jan  15,  i83i,m  Oct  24,  1852,  Clarissa  Sybrant  and 
had  R.  Schuyler,  Attrissa,  Vinton,  Lyle,  George,  Arthur  and  Pearl), 
Julia  M.  (b  Mch  12,  1833,  111  July  26,  1855,  Samuel  Loomis,  and  had 
William,  Nellie,  Maud  and  Lula),  Simon  S.  (b  June  23,  1835,  m  1861  (1) 
Mary  Hathaway,  and  Mch  9,  1882,  (2)  May  Soden  and  had  Devere), 
Arthur  J.  (see  following),  Elgiva  £.  (b  Jan  26,  1841,  m  Aug  29,  1S60, 
George  Wyman  aud  had  Fred,  Inez,  Earl  and  Ree),  Elvira  S.  (b  Feb 
28, 1844,  m  C.  J.  Johnson  and  had  Lula  and  Caspen),  and  Edgar  R.  (b  July 
21,  1846,  d  July  7,  185 1). 

ARTHUR  J.  HUBBARD,  seventh  child  of  the  ten  children  born  to 
Simon  S.  and  Eunice  F.  (Stearns)  Hubbard,  was  born  at  Hart's  Grove, 

Ashtabula  County,  Ohio,  Jan  17,  1839.     He 
removed  to  Iowa  in   1S61   and  in  August, 
1862,  enlisted  in  the  40th  Iowa  Vols  and 
served  with  the  regiment  eighteen  months. 
He  was  then  promoted  1st  Lieutenant  and 
Regimental  Quartermaster  and  served  with 
the  1 6th   Kentucky  Cavalry  until  the  end 
;     of  the  war,  when  he  returned  to  Pennsyl- 
■    vania  and  at   Bradford,  Pa.,  built  the  first 
E    oil  refinery  in  the  town,  which  he  eventu- 
£    ally  sold  to  the  Standard  Oil  Co.,  which 
has   employed    Mr.    HUBBARD  for   the 
past  fifteen  years  as  its  manager  in  North- 
western Ohio  and  a  part  of  Indiana  and 
Arthur  J.  hubbard.  Michigan,   with   headquarters    at  Toledo. 

Mr.  HUBBARD  married   in  October,   1859,    Eliza  N.  Wade  and  had 
Nellie  M.,  Arthur  Devere  and  Nettie  D. 


{^CLASSIFIED  DATA  AXD  MISCELLANY. 


439 


THE  VALUE  OF  ADVERTISING. 

GEORGE    DAVID    READ    HUBBARD,    second    son    of   Colman 
Smith   and   Mary  Platts  (Read)  Hubbard,  and  eighth  in  descent  from 

George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct, 
whose  genealogical  data  is  given  upon 
page  296  of  this  volume,  is  a  firm  con- 
vert to  the  doctrine  that  advertising 
pays.  He  has  tried  it  often  and  has 
never  yet  been  disappointed.  "  It  has 
great  merit,"  he  says,  "and  generally 
brings  quick  returns."  Late  in  Decem- 
ber, 1883,  Mr.  HUBBARD  had  occasion 
to  advertise  in  a  New  Haven  paper  for 
an  office  boy,  in  connection  with  the 
Elm  City  Printers'  Warehouse,  of  which 
he  was  proprietor.  He  specified  that 
the  boy  must  be  neat  and  come  welt 
recommended.  Within  a  few  days,  on 
January  4,  1884,  his  charming  wife  pre- 
sented him  with  a  handsome  cherub  weighing  eleven  pounds.  The 
;  paper  very  promptly  commented  on  the  coincidence  as  showing 
the  great  value  of  advertising,  and  numerous  newspaper  friends  from 
Boston  to  San  Francisco  added  their  little  jokes.  This  much-advertised 
boy  was  named  Carlt,on  Spencer,  and  with  his  brother,  Nelson 
Eugene,  make  a  bright  pair  of  genuine  New  England  Young  Ameri- 
cans. Mr.  HUBBARD  was  a  student  at  the  Collegiate  and  Commer- 
cial Institute  up  to  1875  and  from  there  to  the  National  Business  Col- 
lege, both  of  New  Haven,  Ct.  In  18S2  he  married  Mrs.  S.  Maria 
Hawkes,  an  estimable  lady  of  Springfield,  Mass.  After  disposing  of  his 
business  in  New  Haven,  Ct.,  he  entered  a  larger  field  in  connection  with 
the  well  known  Johnson  Type  Foundry  of  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  and  is  epiite 
an  expert  in  type  faces  and  printing  requisites.  He  has  lived  in  Chicago 
for  four  years,  but  has  recently  removed  to  New  York  in  the  interest  of 
a  new  line  of  business. 


GEORGE  DAVID  READ  HUBBARD. 


SOME  SCOTCH  HUBBARDS. 
SAMUEL' HUBBARD  came  from  Scotland  (time  unknown)  and 
settled  in  Hamlin  County,  Va.,  where  he  died.  No  record  furnished  of 
his  wife  or  children  except  James,  who  had  a  son  John,  who  was  born  in 
Lynchburg,  Va.,  March  8,  1800,  rem  to  Southern  Indiana  and  there  died 
(time  unknown).     It  is  not  related  who  his  wife  was,  but  he  had  a  son — 


44o  H  UBBA  RD  HIS  TOR  V  AND  GENE  A  L  O  G  Y. 

GEORGE  WASHINGTON  HUBBARD,  who  was  born  Sep  13, 
1829,  at  New  Albany,  Harrison  County,  Ind.,  and  died  Dec  2,  1893,  in 
Kenton,  Oklahoma.  He  also  lived  awhile  in  Illinois,  and  married  Dec 
24,  1S52,  Elizabeth  Burger.  Children— Carrie  Anna  (b  Nov  5,  1853,  d 
Dec  21,  1856),  Henry  Clay  (b  Feb  21,  1856,  a  doctor,  specialist,  of 
Bloomington,  111.,  m  Dec  24,  1877,  Andromedia  Mills,  and  had  Null  G., 
b  Jan  10,  1879,  at  Louisville,  Ky.),  John  Douglas  (b  Jan  3,  1859,  d  Jan 
24,  18S6,  m  Dec  24,  1880,  Amanda  Lewis),  Florence  May  (b  Dec  16, 
1861,  m  July  24,  1887,  E.  A.  Leavenworth),  Olive  Bell  (b  Apl  7,  1864, 
m  June  29,  1892,  Charles  W.  Partridge),  Minnie  (b  Jan  19,  1867,  d  Mch 
18,  1S68),  George  Washington  (b  Mch  13,  1870),  Blanche  Elizabeth  (b 
Oct  28,  1872,  m  Jan  2,  1894,  Alexander  MacKenzie)  and  Guy  Earl- 
scout  (b  Jan  3,  1876). 

A  THOMAS  HUBBARD  came  from  Scotland  during  the  latter  part 
of  the  eighteenth  century,  clad  in  the  Scottish  costume,  and  settled 
either  in  Virginia  or  Alabama.  He  had  Thomas,  who  left  home  and 
was  lost  sight  of;  David,  who  was  born  in  1806,  lived  at  Kinlock,  Ala., 
and  was  a  lawyer,  state  senator,  and  finally  a  Member  of  Congress  (see 
Prominent  American  Hubbards);  Vinson  (or  Vincent)  became  a  Pres- 
byterian preacher  in  Alabama;  Margaret  (nothing  known  of);  Green 
K.  and  James  removed  in  1S58  to  Texas.  Green  K.  had  a  daughter 
Mary  Shaw  of  Weimar,  Tex.  Other  relatives  were  Thomas,  Marble 
Falls,  Tex.,/ohn  and  Charles  of  Weimar  and  Fred  of  Sealy,  Tex. 


ADDENDA— SEE  PAGES  295  AND  29S. 

Phineas  Hubbard  (b  Mch  8,  17S3,  d  Sep  3,  1853,  m  Nov  5,  1827,  in 
West  Windsor,  Vt.,  Mary  Shattuck,  b  May  17,  1S05,  d  May  26,  1867,  dau 
of  William  and  Eunice  (Lamphere)  Shattuck,  and  had  Mary  Jane,  b  Sep 
15,  1828,  d  1S53,  m  1848  Martin  Chamberlin;  Albert,  b  Oct  6,  1829,  d 
1S31-2;  Allen,  b  May  10,  1831,  d  Aug  5,  1S46;  George,  b  Dec  21,  1834; 
Catherine,  b  Nov  5,  1841,  m  Martin  Chamberlin). 

Nancy  Hubbard  (b  May  24,  1789,  d  May  26,  1856,  m  Dec  5,  1810,  Jere- 
miah Hubbard,  b  Feb  28,  17S5,  d ),  Oliver  (b  Mch  2S,   1792,  in 

Meriden,  Ct.,  d  Jan  14,  1838,  at  Newport,  N.  H.,  and  buried  in  Windsor, 
Vt.,  m  Betsey  Beckett),  Isaac  Watts  (see  Abridged  Descent  Line 
William  Henry  Hubbard),  Fanny  (b  Mch  10,  1797,  m  Feb,  1824,  Pierce 
Hewlett,  who  d  Nov  5,  1856),  Laura  (b  May  10,  1799,  m  1S18-19 
William  Pettee,  b  Mch,  1794,  and  had  Watts  H.,  b  Jan  1,  1S22,  m  Oct 
31,  1S48,  Eliza  Loveland,  b  Sep  3,  1823),  and  Clarissa  (b  Aug  10,  1802, 
m  Aug  15,  1824,  (1)  Nahum  Swallow  and  (2)  John  Parker). 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AXD  MISCELLANY. 


441 


THE  KELLOGG-HUBBARD  LIBRARY   BUILDING   AT  MONTPELIER,   VT. 

This  building,  now  in  course  of  erection  at  Montpelier,  Vt.,  is  to  be 
donated  to  the  town  when  completed.      It  is  expected  to  cost  upwards 

of  sixty  thousand  dollars,  one 
half  of  which  comes  from  the 
estate  of  Fanny  M.  (Hubbard) 
Kellogg,  daughter  of  Roger  and 
Fanny  (Burbank)  Hubbard  of 
Montpelier.  Mrs.  KELLOGG 
was  born  in  Montpelier,  Vt.,  Oct. 
9,  18 1 9,  and  died  in  New  York 
City  January  29,  1890.  She  was 
the' wife  of' Martin  M.  Kellogg, 
whom  she  married  in  1849. 
Her  estate  came  to  her  from 
her  father,  Roger  Hubbard. 
The  other  half  of  the  amount 
necessary  to  finish  this  hand- 
some structure  (about  thirty 
thousand  dollars)  has  been  given 
to  the  Library  Association  by 
JOHN  ERASTUS  HUBBARD 
(see  page  360  for  biography  and 
descent"  line)  of  Montpelier. 
The  building  is  constructed  of  a  very  light-colored  granite  from  the 
quarries  at  Dummerston,  Vt. 


JOHN    ERASTUS    HUBBARD. 


442  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

ADDENDA— SEE  PAGE  298. 
Laura  C.  Hubbard,  b  May  24,  18 18,  in  Windsor,  Vt.,  m  Sep  2,  1S35, 

(1)  Nicanor  Kendall,  b  Dec  20,  1807,  d  Dec  24,  1861,  and  had  Laura  M., 
b  May  28,  1839,  m  Nov  27,  1861,  Luther  White,  and  had  Luther  and 
Jessica;  Adaline,  b  May  5,  1843,  d  Sep  15,  1844;  Lucy  Ellen,  b  Oct  30, 
1846;  Ada  H.,  b  Oct  21,  1850;  and  Fred,  b  Nov  29,  1855;  I^aura  C.  m 

(2)  1868,  Benjamin  F.  Blood;  Adaline  C,  b  Mch  19,  1822,  in  Windsor, 
Vt.,  d  in  Davenport,  la.,  June  28,  1846,  m  Jan  23,  1844,  in  Davenport, 
la.,  James  Grant  (whose  first  wife  was  Sarah  E.  Hubbard,  dau  of  Ahira 
and  Serena  Hubbard,  and  who  had  Mary  Louisa,  b  Nov  jo,  1839,  d  Nov 
26,  1 841),  and  had  Adeline  Hubbard  Grant,  b  June  20,  1846,  in  Daven- 
port, la.,  d  June  26,  1847,  in  Deep  River,  Ct.;  Guy  Homer,  b  Mch  10, 
1824,  in  Windsor,  Vt.,  d  Apl  15,  1856,  m  Oct  21,  1851,  Clarissa  A.  Rice, 
in  Meriden,  Ct.,  b  Nov  17,  1824,  in  Meriden  Ct.,  d  Dec  26,  1866,  in  Meri- 
den,  Ct.,  and  had  Laura  Maria,  b  July  29,  1852,  in  Shelburne  Falls,  Mass., 
d  June  16,  1853,  in  Shelburne  Falls,  Mass.;  Lucy,  b  June  23,  1826,  d  Dec 
6,  1826;  Lucy  JMoulton,  b  Oct  8,  1827.  m  Sep  30,  1844,  in  Davenport,  la., 
Jared  Beecher  Hitchcock,  b  July  4,  1818,  d  1877,  and  had  Adaline 
Theresa,  b  Sep  8,  1845,  m  Sep  8,  1864,  Elbert  C.  Clark;  Albert  Cullen, 
b  Nov  30,  1848,  m  Oct  11,  1S7 1,  Jennie  Stanley;  Cinthia  Hubbard,  b  185 1, 
m  June  7,  187 1,  Charles  D.  Snover;  Colman  Hubbard,  b  Oct  27,  1853,  m 
Dec  3,  1872,  Mary  E.  Hearne;  Celia  Gardner,  b  June,  1856,  d  July  30, 

i860;  James  Grant,  b ,  m  Oct  17,  1883,  Mary  S.  Noble;  William 

Henry,  b  ,  m  1892  Minnie ;  George  Gardner,  b  ,  m 

Oct  1,  1883,  Cassie  Ada  Wilber;  and  Fred  Allen,  b ,  m  Nov  17, 

1 886,  Minnie  Hasson;  Celia  Lull  (see  following),  b  June  15,  1830,  in 
Proctorsville,  Vt.,  m  Nov  18,  1852,  Rev.  George  Warren  Gardner  (see 
following),  b  Oct  8,  1828,  son  of  Samuel  Walker  and  Sophia  (Greeley) 
Gardner,  and  had  Guy  Hubbard  Gardner,  b  Mch  7,  1856,  m  Aug  16, 
1 88 1,  Cora  Cutler,  b  July  1,  1858,  dau  of  Dr.  George  and  Ann  Maria 
(Smith)  Cutler,  and  had  Frederic  Winsor,  b  Jan  25,  1885,  Walter  Cutler,  b 
Mch  5,  1888,  Margaret,  b  Oct  18,  1889,  Robert  Leland,  b  Nov  15,  1891, 
and  Guy  Hubbard,  b  Aug  27,  1893;  Clarence  Gardner,  b  Dec  12,  1858,  d 
June  8,  1893;  Ada  Grant  Gardner,  b  May  4,  i860,  m  May  4,  1886,  Rev. 
Joseph  F.  Fielden,  b  Oct  23,  1844,  son  of  Samuel  and  Elizabeth  (Scott) 
Fielden,  and  had  Paul,  b  Feb  7,  1887,  Margaret,  b  Apl  8,  1888,  Laura,  b 
Jan  14,  1890,  Andrew  Gardner,  b  Oct  27,  1891,  and  Clarence  Barnard,  b 
Aug  22,  1894;  and  George  Frank  Gardner,  b  Aug  29,  1875;  and  Cullen, 
b  Nov  24,  1833,  in  Proctorsville,  Vt.,  d  Oct  27,  1834). 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AXD  MISCELLANY. 


443 


REV.  GEORGE    WARREN    GARDNER,  D   D.,  AND  CELIA 
LULL  (HUBBARD)  GARDNER. 

For  many  years  the  Rev.  Dr.  Gardner  was  principal  of  the  Baptist 

Academv*  at  New  London,  N.  H.,  which  is  now  known  as  the  Colby 

Academy,  and  was  afterward  pastor  of 
the  First  Baptist  Church  in  Charlcstown, 
Mass.  (now  a  part  of  Boston).  He  was 
also  pastor  in  Cleveland,  Ohio,  and  later 
connected  with  the  American  Baptist  Mis- 
sionary Union.  He  was  a  graduate  of 
Dartmouth  College  (1852),  and  ordained 
in  1S58.  In  1881  he  was  elected  President 
of  Central  College  of  Iowa,  finally  return- 
ing to  New  London  to  spend  his  latter 
davs  in  a  home  presented  to  him  by  the 
grateful  and  appreciative  alumni. 

Celia  Lull  (Hubbard)  Gardner,  his  wife, 
was  the  youngest  of  three  daughters  of 
Asahel  and  Cinthia  (Smith)  Hubbard  and 

sister  of  Colman  Smith   Hubbard  (the  pub-  — ^^ 

lisher's  father).     She  is  a  woman  of  remark- 
able refinement  and  unusually  strong  traits 

of  character,  an  earnest  and  devoted  mother, 

whose  physical  strength  was  not  in  keeping 

with  her  mental  endowments.     Her  children 

are  her  solace  and  pride  and,  like  Cornelia  of 

notable  domestic  fame,  she  points   to  them 

with  pardonable  pride  and  says,   "  these  are 

my  jewels."     See  page  442. 


REV.    GEORGE    \V.    GARDNER. 


A  little  bit  of  Patience  often  makes  the  sunshine  come. 
And  a  little  bit  of  Love  makes  a  very  happy  home: 
A  little  bit  of  Hope  makes  a  rainy  day  look  gay, 
And  a  little  bit  of  Charity  makes  glad  a  weary  way." 


CELIA    L.    H.    GARDNER. 

Descended  from  George  Hubbard 
of  Middletown,  Ct. 


*  The  writer  as  a  boy  of  14  attended  this  famous  school  in  1859-60  and  "  did  the  chores"  for  his 
board  (t.  «.,  took  care  of  horse  and  cow,  shovelled  snow-paths  and  brought  chunks  of  wood  for  seven 
stoves)  in  this  family.  The  care  of  the  dumb  animals  had  to  be  done  by  clock  work,  the  snow  aver- 
aged four  feet  deep  in  winter  and  the  wood  was  heavy,  and  in  addition  to  keeping  up  his  studies  and 
duties  as  Secretaryof  the  Athenian  Society,  it  was  about  all  a  slender  boy  measuring  twenty  inches 
(waist  measure  i  wanted  to  do.    But  it  did  not  hurt  him,  in  fact  it  developed  him. 


444  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

INCOMPLETE  DESCENT  LINES. 

JOHN  HENRY  HUBBARD,  second  son  of  the  four  children  of 
Elijah  Jones  and  Mary  (Mangum)  Hubbard,  was  born  in  Dekalb  County, 
Georgia,  March  7,  1844,  and  moved  to  Winston  County,  Miss.,  in  1855. 
He  served  as  a  private  soldier  in  the  Confederate  service  in  the  14th 
Miss.  Vols,  and  after  the  termination  of  hostilities  engaged  in  the  cotton- 
mill  business  with  his  brother  Walter  Jones  Hubbard  (now  of  Harwood, 
Tex.)  at  Hashuqua  and  also  Meridan,  Miss.  He  married  (1)  Mary  P. 
Mims  and  had  Walter;  and  (2)  Laura  E.  Combs  and  had  William 
Henry,  Flavius  Josephus,  Ernest  Jones,  Senia  Etta,  and  Thomas 
George.     It  is  supposed  that  his  father's  ancestors  came  from  Virginia 

LUCIUS  HUBBARD,  eldest  of  the  three  children  of  Ransom  and 
Mariette  Hubbard  and  grandson  of  Jonathan  and  Rebecca  Hubbard, 
was  born  Jan  7,  1844,  in  St.  Joseph  County,  Ind.,  and  graduated  in  1866 
from  the  Law  Department  of  the  University  of  Michigan.  He  settled 
in  1S67  in  South  Bend,  Ind.,  where  he  is  now  engaged  in  the  active 
practice  of  law.  In  1873-75  he  served  in  the  Indiana  State  Senate,  and 
since  1879  has  been  the  President  of  the  First  National  Bank  of  South 
Bend.  Jan  7,  1869,  he  married  Martha  O.  Davis  of  that  place.  His 
grandfather,  Jonathan  (one  of  eleven  children,  three  of  whom  were 
named  Francis,  Silas  and  Demus)  originally  came  from  Connecticut  to 
Oneida  County,  N.  Y.,  and  thence  to  St.  Joseph  County,  Ind.,  in  1834, 
and  died  about  1859.  LUCIUS  HUBBARD  has  one  son,  Arthur  (b 
Nov  19,  1872,  a  member  of  the  '94  class  of  the  University  of  Michigan). 

(Preceding   ancestors  unknown.      See  Virginia    Hubbards),  George 

Hubbard — Judith ,  John  Hubbard — Martha  Sanders  (of  Virginia 

and  North  Carolina),  George  Hubbard  —  Nancy  Shields,  William  B. 
Hubbard — Ludah  Vestal. 

BENJAMIN  VESTAL  HUBBARD,  youngest  of  the  nine  children 
of  William  B.  and  Ludah  (Vestal)  Hubbard,  was  born  near  Monrovia, 
Ind.,  June  29,  1854,  and  educated  at  Spiceland  Academy  and  Earlham 
College,  Ind.  His  parents  were  Quakers,  who  died  when  he  was  seven 
years  old  leaving  him  no  legacy  but  good  principles  and  a  courageous 
heart  to  pursue  life's  struggle  with.  He  taught  school  4  years,  then 
engaged  in  journalism  and  afterward  practiced  law  from  1878  to  1880, 
when  he  became  the  Steward  of  Indiana  Hospital  for  the  Insane.  In 
1883  he  acted  as  general  life  insurance  agent  at  Rock  Island,  111.,  Des 
Moines,  Iowa,  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  and  Chicago,  111.,  and  was  made  Super- 
intendent of  Insurance  for  Illinois  in  January,  1893.  He  married  Dec  15, 
1882,  Mary  F.  Gentry;  no  children. 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AXD  MISCELLANY.  445 

"OHO    HUB." 
GU  V  1 1  (  )MER  HUBBARD,  son  of  Harlan  Page 
•**  *'j  and  Adelia  Anna  (Crocker)  Hubbard,  was  born  in 

New  Haven,  Ct,  Jan  7,    1874.      He  prepared  for 
W   f\  college   at   the    Hillhouse    High    School   in    New 

Haven,  entering  Polytechnic  Institute  of  Brooklyn, 
N.  Y.,  in  which  city  he  resides.  He  has  adopted 
newspaper  work  as  his  profession,  and  is  ninth  in 
descent  from  George  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct. 


HOW  TO  SUBDUE  AX  ENTHUSIASTIC  COMPILER  OF 
GENEALOGIES. 

Do  not  reply  until  he  has  written  to  you  three  times.  Then  wait  a 
little  longer.     Perhaps  he  will  write  the  fourth  time. 

Do  not  give  names  in  full  for  purposes  of  identification.  Send  him 
initials  only.     This  will  keep  him  guessing  and  give  his  mind  active  play. 

Do  not  give  in  one  letter  facts  that  can  be  distributed  about  in  several. 
Our  Postal  System  is  not  running  for  amusement,  and  must  be  supported. 

Do  not  answer  direct  questions.  If  he  particularly  wishes  information 
about  your  grandfather  you  can  easily  head  him  off  by  sending  facts 
about  your  wife's  uncle. 

Do  not  satisfy  his  unblushing  curiosity  about  yourself.  He  is  an 
inquisitive  person  and  asks  point  blank  for  your  full  name^  and  age. 
Forward  this  data  about  others,  but  withhold  it  about  yourself. 

When  names  in  several  generations  are  the  same,  by  careful  effort 
they  can  be  so  distributed  that  'tother  can  not  be  recognized  from  which. 
This  is  of  immense  value  in  cultivating  the  highest  phase  of  mind 
reading. 

When  you  receive  letters  and  circulars  asking  for  family  data,  reply 
and  say  that  you  have  considerable,  and  ask  him  if  he  wants  it.  This 
will  consume' time  and  stationery  and  keep  the  purseproud  compiler 
properly  humble  and  industrious. 

Do  not  write  unusual  proper  names  legibly.  Thus  you  will  catch  him 
in  his  opaque  ignorance,  and  perhaps  be  able  to  reduce  afterward  his 
avoirdupois  by  scathing  references  to  this  opaqueness.  This  should  worry 
him  thin,  and  is  far  more  effective  than  the  banting  system. 

When  inquiring  if  your  line  is  to  be  in  the  book,  avoid  mentioning 
full  names,  dates,  or  any  possible  clues  that  will  help  the  compiler  to 
settle  the  point.  Mention  in  a  general  way  that  you  had  a  grandfather 
who  had  several  children.  There  are  lines  and  lines,  and  it  is  the  busi- 
ness of  the  genealogist  to  divine  them  off-hand  or  take  down  his  sign. 


446 


HUBBA  RD  HIS  TOR  Y  A  ND  GENE  A  LOG  V, 
THROUGH    RINGS   OF   SMOKE. 

A    REVERIE. 

As  I  sit  by  the  fire  the  embers  grow  dim; 

My  dainty  cigarro,  round,  shapely  and  slim, 

Sends  airily  upward  a  volume  of  smoke. 

In  the  midst  of  the  cloud  I  can  see  all  the  folk, 

Living  or  dead,  whom  I  once  called  my  friends 

In  the  long  ago.    Another  puff  lends 

Additional  charm,  for  with  vision  half  clear. 

My  mind  wanders  back  to  the  days— Ah !     How  dear 

To  my  heart!— when  in  gay  society's  whirls, 

I  was  free  to  make  love  to  a  dozen  fair  girls. 

That  small,  graceful  ring  of  blue  smoke  curling  up 
Brings  vividly  back  the  dear  days  when  my  cup 
Of  happiness,  surely,  was  full  to  the  brim; 
For  I  sit  by  the  fire,  the  embers  grow  dim, 
And  in  that  blue  wreath  that  is  floating  above 
I  see  the  dear  form  of  fair  Nan,  my  first  love. 
We  met  at  the  seashore  four  years  last  July, 
And  ere  the  gay  months  of  the  summer  sped  by 
We  two  had  made  vows— vows  e'er  to  bo  kept, 
And  my  dreams  were  ever  of  her  when  I  slept. 

But  in  less  than  a  month  she  had  gone  back  to  town; 

On  another  dark  head  I  had  placed  my  queen's  crown. 

Her  name  was  Marie,  and  if  ever  man  loved 

With  an  ardent  affection  that  must  needs  have  proved 

His  sincerity,  that  man  was  I.     And  'tis  now 

Her  eyes  that  remind  me  of  my  broken  vow, 

As  reproachfully,  tenderly,  still  full  of  love, 

They  glance  down  at  me  from  that  ring  just  above. 

But  no '.     The  smoke  changes !     A  change  for  the  better  1 

And  now  in  that  wreath  I  can  see— Alfaretta : 

But  the  vision's  fast  fading,  and  here  in  its  place. 
In  kaleidoscope  change,  are  the  features  of  Grace. 
Grace  was  a  stunner,  a  beauteous  blonde, 
And  a  girl  of  whom  I  was  deucedly  fond, 
For  she  and  I  married  on  May  twenty-eight. 
Nearly  two  years  gone  by ;   and  it  was  our  fate 
Not  a  great  while  ago— but  where  are  those  rings? 
My  cigar  has  gone  out;   still  a  faint  odor  clings. 
But  hark  !     There's  ...  squall,  half  in  cradle-clothes  hid. 
That  states  I  must  walk  all  night  long  with  that  kid  I 

—Guy  Homer  Hubbard. 


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447 


448  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 

METERS    FROM    THE    MUSES-WRITTEN    BY    HUBBARD 

DESCENDANTS. 

Verses  at  Dissolving  a  Hubbard  Re-union.-By  E.  H.  G.) 

Though  parted,  we  are  with  you  still, 

For  friendship's  bond  shall  ne'er  be  broken; 

With  thoughts  of  you  our  hearts  shall  thrill, 

For  there  is  left  with  us  a  token— 

A  gift  whose  price  is  not  in  coin— 

The  worth  of  which  no  words  can  tell, 

For  which  we  thank  you  as  we  join 

To  speak  that  last  sad  word,  "  Farewell." 


(By  F.  S.  S.) 

Joy  stood  upon  my  threshold  mild  and  fair, 

With  lilies  in  her  hair. 
I  bade  her  enter  as  she  turned  to  go, 

And  she  said,  "No." 

Fortune  once  bathed  at  my  ruined  porch 
And  lit  it  with  her  torch  ; 

I  asked  her  fondly,  "  Have  you  come  to  stay  V 
She  answered,  "  Nay  " 

Fame  robed  in  spotless  white  before  me  came 
1  longed  her  kiss  to  claim  : 

I  told  her  how  her  presence  I  revered. 
She  disappeared. 

Love  came  at  last— how  pure,  how  sweet— 

With  roses  at  her  feet. 
I  begged  her  all  her  bounty  to  bestow  ; 

She  answered,  "  No." 

Since  then.  Joy,  Fortune,  Love,  and  Fame, 
Have  come  my  soul  to  claim  ; 

I  see  them  smiling  everywhere. 
But  do  not  care. 


(By  E.  W.  D.) 

You  may  hide  from  all  eyes  your  burdens, 
Your  weariness  from  heart-aches  and  strife 
Keep  grinding  to  the  tune  of  "  your  duty  " 
In  the  unmusical  marches  of  life: 
You  may  live  so  the  world  will  applaud  you, 
Live  a  life  both  respected  and  bright. 
Sink  love  below  the  level  of  Duty. 
And  rejoice  in  the  triumph  of  Right- 
Yet  still  will  unsatisfied  longings, 
(Not  clearly  or  easily  defined) 
Steal  out,  during  unguarded  moments, 
From  the  soul  that  is  closely  confined, 
And  ask.  in  voice  faint  and  weary, 
For  refreshment  from  affection's  vast  store; 
But  the  voice  is  unheard  and  unanswered 
In  the  noise  of  the  world's  ceaseless  roar. 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AND  MISCELLANY.  m 

CLARENCE  A.  HUBBARD  OF  LAKE  CITY    MINN 
JOHN  ITHEAL  HUBBARD  was  born  in    Genesee  County,  New 
York,  February   17th,  1820,  and  married  Lucy  L.  Smith  on  November 
15th,  1843,  at  Leslie,  Ingham  County,  Michigan 

On  November  4,  1844,  there  was  born  to  them  the  subject  of  this 
sketch,  Clarence  A.  Hubbard.     When  he  was  nine  years  of  ao-e  the 
family  moved  to  Winona,  Minn.,  and  were  among  the  pioneer  settlers 
of  that  now  prosperous  city.     His  sister,  Arabella  Stuart,  b   Nov   28 
1 857,  m  Y\  .  S.  Williams,  at  Winona,  Minn.  *      ' 

In   1858 :  Mr.  Hubbard  returned  to  Lansing;  Mich.,  for  a  course  of 
and   two  years   later   he   entered   the   State  Normal  School  at 

Winona,  from  which  he  was  gradu- 
ated, going  into  the  army  in  1862  and 
serving  with  his  regiment,  the  8th 
Minnesota  Infantry,  on  the  frontier 
during  the  Sioux  war,  and  later  on 
the  staffs  of  Gens.  R.  N.  McLaren 
and  H.  H.  Sibley. 

At  the  close  of  the  war  of  the  re- 
bellion Mr.  Hubbard  embarked  in 
the  grain  business  in  Lake  City, 
Minn.,  from  which  he  retired  in  1869 
and  entered  the  banking  house  of  C. 
W.  Hackett  &  Co.  In  1873  the  bank 
was  incorporated  under  the  laws  of 
the  state  as  the  Lake  City  Bank  of 
Minnesota,  and  Mr.  Hubbard  was 
elected  cashier,  which  position  he 
still  occupies.  He  is  also  a  director 
and  the  largest  stock-holder  of  the 
bank,  which  is  a  strong  and  prosper- 
ous institution,  with  ample  capital  and 
good  surplus.  Mr.  Hubbard's  wife, 
Helen  (Blanchard)  Hubbard,  was 
born  January  1 8th,  1859;  a  daughter, 


CLARENCE    A.    HUBBARD. 
LAKE     CITY,    MINX. 


Florence,   was  born   December  3d, 


His  son,   by  his  first  wife, 


W  ilham  A.,  was  born  August  9th,  1867,  and  is  also  a  stock-holder  and 
director  of  the  bank.  Mr.  Hubbard  is  a  Knight  Templar  and  a  mem- 
ber  of  the  First  Congregational  Church  of  Lake  City.  He  has  also 
been  Mayor  of  the  City,  and  has  always  taken  a  deep  interest  in  all 
matters  affecting  the  prosperity  of  the  city.  He  is  evidently  not  "a 
pn.phet  without  honor  in  his  own  country,"  and 'should  he  consent  to 
enter  politics  we  may  look  for  another  Governor  Hubbard  of  Minnesota 


4c0  HI  BEARD  HIS  TOR  \ r  AND  GENE  A  LOGY 

VIRGINIA    HUBBARDS. 

{Additional  to  Pages  79  to  84.) 


DESCENDANTS  OF  ANN  HUBBARD  AND  COL.  JAMES 

TAYLOR. 

From  two  great  grand-daughters  of  Ann  Hubbard  (Mrs.  Alice  E.  T. 
Chandler  and  Mrs.  Jane  B.  Hart  of  Washington  Seminary,  Atlanta, 
Ga.),  and  Mr.  P.  F.  Taylor,  Louisville,  the  following  will  be  of  interest. 

"ANN  HUBBARD,  daughter  of  James  Hubbard,  Jr.,*b  1732,  d  1814, 
next  in  descent  from  James  Hubbard,  son  of  James  of  "  Gloster  "  (see 
pages  84and  165),  m  Col.  James  Taylor,  1758,  son  of  James  Taylor,  of  Car- 
lisle, Eng.,  who  emigrated  to  Virginia  in  1654  and  was  the  founder  of  the 
Taylor  family  in  this  country,  and  of  which  Zachary  Taylor,  President 
of  the  United  States,  was   an  honored  representative.     ANN  (HUB- 
BARD) TAYLOR'S  children  were  James  (who  emigrated  to  Kentucky, 
in  which  State  and  in  Ohio  he  became  the  owner  of  more  than  100,000 
acres  of  land,  on  a  portion   of  which  the  cities  of  Newport  and  Cov- 
ington are  built),  Hubbard,  m  Clarissa  Minor;  Reuben  Thornton,  m 
Mary  T.   Thornton;  Edmund,!  James,  m  Mrs.  Keturah  (Moss)  Leitch; 
Alice,  m  Washington  Berry;  Lucy,  Ann,  m  Robert  Taliaferro;  Patsy, 
d  single;    Mary  Todd,   m  Peter  Thornton,  and  Elizabeth   Hubbard. 
All   moved   to    Kentucky   except    Mary  and    Elizabeth.     Elizabeth 
Hubbard  Taylor  m  Thomas  Minor  (bro  of  Clarissa)  of  Spottsylvania 
Co.,  Va.,  who  raised  a  company  and  went  into  the  Revolutionary  War  as 
Captain,  serving  seven  years.     In  1825,  when  Lafayette  visited  Freder- 
icksburgh,  Va.,  Capt.   Minor  was  appointed  Master  of  Ceremonies  to 
entertain  him.     Some  years  later  he  attended  memorial  services  held  in 
Fredericksburgh,  after  the  death  of  the  Marquis,  and  died  a  few  days 
later,  in  his  85th  year,  from  illness  brought  on  by  the  fatigue  of  the  occa- 
sion.    Elizabeth   Hubbard  (Taylor)   Minor's  children  were  Melinda, 
m Buckner;  Patsy,  m Chevis;  Elizabeth,  m  William  Jack- 
son of  Fredericksburgh,  Va.;  Sarah,  m  Rev.  Addison  Lewis;  Hubbard 
Taylor,  Jefferson,  m  Virginia  Jones;  Ann  Hubbard,  James,  John,  Thomas, 
Lucy,  m  Col.  Colby  Taylor  of  Kentucky;  Alice  Taylor  and  Ann  Maria. 
Hubbard    Taylor  Minor,  M.  D.,  eldest  son  of  Elizabeth   Hubbard 
(Taylor)  Minor,  was  born  Aug.    1,    1796,  d  Oct.  7,   1876,  m  (1)  Jane 

♦This  seems  to  be  in  contradiction  of  page  84,  although  the  Taylor  genealogy  gives  Ann  Hubbard 
as  dau  of  Bery  (or  Benj.)  and  wife  Elizabeth  Todd,  and  says:  "  Col.  James  was  the  companion  of 
Gen.  Washington  during  the  French  and  Indian  wars  in  fortifying  the  frontier  from  the  Potomac  to 
Staunton,  Va.  He  served  through  the  Revolution,  was  High  Sheriff  of  Caroline,  Burgess  1762-4,  mem. 
Committee  of  Safety  1774-6,  of  the  convention  1775  6,  delegate  to  convention  of  1788,  and  member  of 
the  Va.  Legislature  which  framed  the  constitution  of  the  State.  He  held  public  office  for  forty  years 
without  suffering  defeat." 

t  Mr.  Taylor  says:  "  Edmund  m  Mary  Todd  Hinde,  dau  Dr.  Thos.  Hinde  (surgeon  in  English  army), 
and  Mary  Todd  Hubbard,  the  latter  being  a  sister  of  Ann  Hubbard." 


UNCLA  SSI F I  ED  DA  TA  A  ND  M ISC  ELLA  NY.         45  r 

Blake,  and  had  Benjamin  Blake,  b  Oct.  21,  1820,  who  settled  in  Rich- 
mond, Va.,  practiced  law,  edited  the  Southern  Literary  Messenger,  was 
M.  A.  by  University  of  Virginia  and  appointed  President  of  State  Uni- 
versity of  Missouri.  He  m  Virginia  Maury,  daughter  of  Rt.  Rev. 
James  Hervey  Otey,  Bishop  of  Tennessee,  and  had  Hervey  Otey, 
Hubbard  Taylor  m  Annie  Cazenove  Lamar  of  Savannah,  Ga.,  and  had 
Benjamin  Blake,  Leonidas  Cobb,  Wm.  Pannill,  Paul  Hooker,  Viola  Vir- 
ginia, Thomas  Aldrige,  Jane,  Washington  and  Ellen  Jackson.  Hub- 
bard Taylor  Minor  to.  (2)  Malvina  Crutchfield,  grand-daughter  of  Sta- 
pleton  Crutchfield,  who  served  in  the  House  of  Burgesses,  Va.  Chil- 
dren— Oscar,  Thomas  and  Jane  Blake  b  Nov.  9th,  1830,  m  Wm.  Timothy 
Hart  of  Fredericksburgh,  Va.,  b  Oct.  20th,  1822,  a  lineal  descendant, 
through -his  mother,  of  John  Alden  and  Priscilla  Mullins  of  Plymouth 
memory.  Children — Virginia  Minor,  James  Edward,  Wm.  Taylor, 
Malvina  Meade  and  Mary  Randolph. 

Ann  Maria  Minor,  youngest  child  of  Elizabeth  Hubbard  (Taylor) 
Minor,  b  May  17,  1804,  d  Sept.  20,  1889,  m  Francis  Woolfolk  Scott,  law- 
yer, of  Caroline  Co.,  Va.,  b  1799,  d  1863.  Children — Alice  Elizabeth 
Taylor,  b  Aug  31,  1839,  now  Principal  Washington  Seminary,  Atlanta, 
Ga.,  m  William  Timothy  Chandler,  lawyer,  b  May  17,  1832,  lineal 
descendant  of  Sir  Francis  Wyatt,  Colonial  Governor  of  Virginia;  Francis 
Woolfolk,  Jr.,  b  March  9, 1840,  m  (1)  Julia  Isabel  Mann  and  had  Llewellyn 
Davis,  Professor  Marion  Military  Institute,  Alabama,  b  Nov.  6,1871, 
who  m  Eliza  Wyatt  Lovelace,  and  had  Mary  Emma,  Francis  Woolfolk 
and  Ann  Elizabeth;  he  m  (2)  Caroline  Blake  and  had  Walter  Caroll, 
Blake  Minor,  Virginia  Lee  and  Preston;  Maria  Louisa,  b  Nov.  23,  1842, 
m  Rev.  Charles  B.  Stuart,  Professor  Randolph  Macon  College,  Virginia, 
and  had  Alice  Chandler,  m  Chesley  Adams,  lawyer,  Marshall.  Tex., 
Francis  Woolfolk  and  James;  Mary  Emma,  m  Rev.  Edgar  Haley  Rowe, 
now  President  Wesleyan  College,  Macon,  Ga.,  and  had  Edgar  Scott." 

Munsell's  American  Ancestry,  Vol.  IX.,  gives  the  following  particu- 
lars: James  Taylor,  who  came  from  England  and  settled  in  Virginia  in 
1644-60,  married  Sarah  Gregory  and  had  James,  born  in  Caroline 
County,  Va.,  1674,  died  in  Orange  County,  Va.,  in  1729,  and  who  was 
one  of  the  first  Surveyor  Generals  of  Virginia  and  great  grandfather  of 
two  Presidents,  married  Martha  Thompson  Feb.  23,  1699.  From  this 
authority  and  the  statement  given  above  it  is  highly  probable  that  his 
son,  James  Taylor,  was  the  one  who  married  Ann  Hubbard,  he  being 
a  cousin  of  Gen.  Zachary  Taylor's  father.  President  Taylor,  twelfth 
President  of  the  United  States,  had  a  brother,  Col.  Hubbard  Taylor, 
U.  S.  A.,  and  this  branch  was  directly  related  to  that  of  Col.  James  and 
Ann  (Hubbard)  Taylor.  One  of  Ann's  sisters  married  James  Harrison, 
grandfather  of  Gen.  Wm.  Henry  Harrison,  ninth  President  of  the  U.  S. 


452  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

GENERAL  JAMES  HUBBARD  OF  SALISBURY,  CONN. 
At  the   last  moment  there  comes  to  hand  a  record  of  a  brave  soldier 
and  courteous  gentleman,  which  is  so  much  a  part  of  our  history  that  it 
is  inserted  here,  copied  in  full  from  The  National  Tribune  of  Washing- 
ton, D.  C,  of  Nov.  30,  1886.     His  photograph  hardly  does  him  justice. 

MUSTERED  OUT. 
Hubbard  —On  the  evening  of  Dec.  31  there  passed  away  at  his 
residence  in  Washington,  D.  C,  after  a  brief  illness.  Gen.  James 
Hubbard,  as  brave  an  officer  as  ever  drew  sword  in  defense  of 
country.  Gen.  Hubbard  was  a  native  of  Salisbury,  Conn.  Prior 
to  the  war  he  re&ided  in  Illinois,  and  first  took  the  field  as  Lieu- 
tenant in  the  20th  111.  Later  he  raised  a  company  in  his  native 
town,  for  service  in  the  10th  Conn.,  known  as  the  Litchfield 
County  Regiment,  and  was  appointed  Captain  of  Company  B 
Aug.  15.  18C2:  was  promoted  to  Major  Nov.  5,  1862;  made  Lieu- 
tenant-Colonel May  13, 1864.  and  Colonel  Jan.  7,  1865.  For  gal- 
lant and  meritorious  service  before  Petersburg,  and  at  the  battle 
of  Sailor's  Creek,  Va.,  April  6,  1865,  he  was  brevetted  Brigadier- 
general  by  President  Johnson.  The  regiment  to  which  Gen. 
Hubbard  was  attached  performed  provost  duty  in  Alexandria, 
Va.,  during  the  winter  of  1862-63;  subsequently  it  garrisoned  the 
forts  in  that  Vicinity,  and  was  changed  to  the  2d  Conn.  II.  A.  on 
.  -*•  Nov.  13,  1863.    It  took  the  field  as  infantry,  and  at  that  time 

general  JAME8  hubbakd.  f oi  med  the  major  portion  of  the  Second  Brigade  (Upton's)  of 

the  First  Division,  Sixth  Corps.  At  Cold  Harbor  Gen.  Hubbard 
(then  Lieutenant-Colonel)  led  the  front  battalion  over  the  enemy's  works  in  a  charge  so  gallant  that 
114  of  the  regiment  were  killed  and  179  wounded.  With  one  exception,  when  on  leave  of  absence. 
Gen.  Hubbard  participated  in  all  the  battles  in  which  the  regiment  was  engaged,  among  which  may 
be  mentioned  Petersburg,  Winchester  (Sept.  19,  1864)  Fisher's  Hill,  Cedar  Creek  and  Sailor's  Creek. 
The  casualties  of  his  regiment  in  less  than  one  year  following  May  24,  1864,  were  killed,  234;  wounded. 
470;  missing  in  action.  21;  and  died  in  rebel  prisons.  22— total,  750.  It  is  undoubtedly  true,  as  claimed 
by  Comrade  G.  C.  Stewart  in  the  last  issue  of  The  National  Tribune,  that  the  2d  Conn.  Heavy  Artil- 
lery was  the  first  to  enter  Petersburg  on  the  morning  of  its  surrender.  He  says:  "  Col.  James  Hub- 
bard, now  I  believe  located  in  Washington,  commanded  the  regiment,  and  was  appointed  Provost 
Marshal  "  of  Petersburg.  Little  did  Comrade  Stewart  think  wh<n  he  penned  that  article  that  on  the 
very  day  of  its  issue  the  mortal  remains  of  the  gallant  Colonel  of  whom  he  spoke  would  be  tenderly 
consigned  to  a  vault  in  the  Congressional  Cemetery.  Comrade  Jerome  B.  Burke,  Commander  of  the 
Department  of  the  Potomac,  who  is  ever  working  for  the  ex-soldiers,  living  and  dead,  took  charge  of 
the  funeral  ceremonies  in  Washington,  and  Department  Chaplain  Swallow  delivered  the  discourse. 
The  crief -stricken  widow  will  take  the  remains  to  Winsted,  Conn.,  where  on  the  3d  prox.,  by  the 
hands  of  the  surviving  members  of  his  regiment,  they  will  be  laid  to  rest  among  his  former  comrades 
and  fellow-officers  who  have  gone  before.  Gen.  Hubbard  being  of  a  retiring  nature,  had  but  a  small 
circle  of  acquaintances  in  Washington,  and  none  knew  from  his  lips  the  service  which  he  rendered 
his  country  in  its  hour  of  need. 

Dr.  Henry  Plumb,  of  Chicago,  the  Surgeon  of  his  regiment,  in  a 
tribute  in  the  Winsted  (Ct.)  Herald  oi  Feb.  4,  1887,  said: 

"  He  won  everybody's  esteem  and  friendship,  and  I  question  whether  there  was  a  man  under  his 
command,  officer  or  private,  who  ever  felt  in  his  heart  that  James  Hubbard  had  been  unjust  to  him. 
In  all  the  trying  and  vexatious  positions  m  which  he  was  placed,  I  believe  none  felt  that  he  dealt  by 
them  otherwise  than  as  he  conscientiously  believed  was  right.  Such  confidence  in  the  correctness  of 
his  motives  and  his  desire  at  all  times  to  be  just  did  every  one  feel  that  none  felt  aggrieved. 

"  His  character  was  in  many  respects  exceptional.  Modesty  was  a  prominent  quality  of  his 
nature,  and  had  others  been  as  slow  as  himself  to  recognize  his  worth  the  promotions  he  so  richly 
earned  would  probably  never  have  been  awarded  him. 

"  His  desire  was  to  do  his  duty,  and  if  promotion  came  as  a  consequence,  it  was  well;  if  not,  it  was 
also  well.    I  do  not  believe  he  ever  gave  the  subject  of  his  own  advancement,  or  the  question  as  to 


UNCLASSIFIED  DATA  AXD  MISCELLANY.  453 

vhat  public  opinion  of  his  conduct  on  the  field  would  be.  a  single  thought.  He  was  not  one  of  those 
who  seek  the  bubble  reputation  in  the  cannon's  mouth.'  He  was  a  soldier  not  to  win  personal  glory 
but  to  do  a  soldier's  duty  to  his  country.  And  none  ever  did  it  more  heroically.  He  was  not  eager 
for  the  fray  ;  he  did  not  love  the  carnage  and  wild  tumult  of  the  battle  as  some  men  do,  but  he  was 
always  ready  to  go  forward  to  the  most  desperate  undertakings  when  duty  called  him  to  the  task 
This  is  true  heroism." 

John  T.  Hubbard  of  Milton,  Conn.,  gives  the  following  interesting 
data  of  this  family.  While  some  of  it  appears  elsewhere,  it  is  inserted 
here  as  giving  the  family  line  of  Gen.  James  Hubbard: 

PARLEY  HUBBARD  was  born  about  1767  and  died  about  1848. 
His  wife  was  Ann  Catlin.  He  was  a  Captain  in  the  State  Militia. 
There  were  four  sons.  Hiram  B.,  the  eldest,  was  born  at  Salisbury, 
Ct,  about  1796,  and  died  in  1859;  he  married  one  Polly  Dean,  of 
Canaan,  Ct.,  a  school  teacher.  The  second  son,  Joseph  A.,  born  at  Sal- 
isbury in  1800,  died  about  1877  in  Honesdale,  Wayne  Co.,  Pa.,  was  a 
farmer.     The  third,  John   H.,  born  at  Salisbury  in  '1803,  married  Julia 

A.  Dodge  for  his  first  wife,  who  had  one  son  and  one  daughter,  who 
both  died  in  infancy;  for  his  second,  Abbie  J.  Wells,  of  Litchfield,  Ct. 
She  is  still  living  in  Litchfield.  He  was  a  lawyer,  and  went  to  Congress 
about  i860  and  served  two  terms.  He  had  three  children  by  his  second 
wife,  two  sons  and  one  daughter,  John  T.,  Philip  P.  and  Annie.  The 
eldest  son,  John  T.,  is  a  lawyer,  and  is  practicing  now  in  Litchfield. 
Philip  P.  is  in  the  service  of  the  Shepang  Railroad.  They  are  all  un- 
married. Alexander,  born  in  1806  in  Salisbury,  died  June,  1881.  He 
married  Manclain  Van  Duesen,  of  Salisbury/  in  1828.  He  was  a 
Deputy  Sheriff  in  Salisbury  for  a  good  many  years.  His  family 
consisted  of  four  sons  and  two  daughters.  Jane  V.,  "born  June  14,  1830, 
married  Benjamin  Durfey,  of  Delaware,  Ohio,  in  1890.  He  is  an  old 
soldier.     Next  is  Gen.  James,  born  July  12,  1833.     He  married  Marion 

B.  Perry,  of  Winsted,  Ct.,  about  1868.  I  am  the  next,  John  T.,  born  in 
Salisbury,  Ct.,  Nov.  19,  1836.  Am  a  painter  and  machinist  by  occupa- 
tion. Married  Fannie  B.  Blake,  of  Salisbury,  Nov.  20,  1888.  Next  is 
Henry  P.,  born  in  Pine  Plains,  Dutchess  Co',  N.  Y.,  in  April,  1838,  a 
carriage  painter  in  Poughkeepsie,  N.  Y.  Married  Maria  Claffie,  of 
Hartford,  Ct.  The  next  son,  Edwin  S.,  born  at  Pine  Plains,  N.  Y.,  in 
1840,  went  out  in  the  Tenth  Connecticut  Infantry  as  private  in  1861, 
was  transferred  to  the  Second  Connecticut  Heavy  Artillery  in  1863  and 
was  made  Second  Lieutenant  under  Col.  McKensey.  (See  Union  De- 
fenders.) He  married  in  Columbus,  Ohio,  and  is  now  living  in  West 
Plains,  Mo.  The  next,  a  daughter,  Annie,  born  in  Pine  Plains,  N.  Y., 
1S42,  married  Henry  A.  Beers,  of  Lakeville,  Ct.,  about  1863.  They  have 
had  ten  children,  six  sons  and  four  daughters. 


454 


Hi  TBBA  RD  HIS  TOR  Y  A  ND  GENE  A  LOGY. 


Jefferson,  O. — A  correspondent  sends  the  following  in  addition  to 
what  appears  elsewhere  :  WILLIAM  HUBBARD  m  Catherine  Hul- 
bert  and  had  Catherine  Maria  b  June  5,  181 1,  d  Nov  29,  1859,  m  Oct 
29.  I&35,  Orrawel  Hinckley  Fitch  (of  the  line  of  Rev.  James  Fitch, 
who  settled  in  Norwich,  Ct.,  165 1),  and  had  at  Ashtabula,  O.,  Edward 
Hubbard,  b  May  26,  1837,  and  Fanny  Catherine,  b  Jan  26,  1842,  grad 
Lake  Erie  Female  Seminary  in  1861,  m  Jan  25,  1872,  Marshall  H.  Has- 
kell, b  Dec  25,  1839.  Mr.  E.  H.  Fitch  grad  at  Williams  College,  1858,  and 
practiced  law  at  Ashtabula.  He  m  Alta  Direxa  Winchester,  b  Sep  11, 
1839,  and  had  Catherine  Hubbard,  b  Feb  ir,  1865,  d  Aug  7,  1870;  Win- 
chester, b  Nov  21,  1867;  Annette  b  Jan  31,  1870,  m  I.  C.  Brewer  Jan  31, 
1892;  Elizabeth  Gilman  b  Jan  4,  1872, .d  Feb  27,  1880;  Edward  Hubbard 
b  Mar  30,  1873;  Alta  Direxa  b  July  24,  1875;  Flora  Cornelia  b  Aug  5, 
1878;  Charles  Gilman  b  Nov  24,  1886,  d  y. 

Airs.  Caroline  Maria  Rosecranz,  a  descendant  of  Nehemiah  Hubbard 
of  Connecticut,  was  the  wife  of  Hon.  Benj.  F.  Wade,  M.  C.  from 
Ohio.  Their  only  children  are  Major  Henry  Parsons  Wade,  now  of  the 
Auditorium,  Chicago,  and  Col.  Jas.  F.  Wade,  U.  S.  A.  Cavalry. 

RECORDS  WANTED. 

Red  Wing,  Minn. — Mrs.  Julia  H.  Willard  writes:  "  My  mother  was 
Juliana  Hubbard,  born  in  West  Hartford,  Ct.,  daughter  of  Levi  Hub- 
bard, son  of  Docitheus  and  Tamar  Hubbard.  This  is  as  far  back  as  I 
know  the  line.  Can  you  help  me  ?  My  mother  was  one  of  fourteen 
children.     So  there  are  numerous  grandchildren  interested." 

Saginaw,  Mich. — Mrs.  Martha  P.  Hubbard-Howry  writes:  "  Elisha 
Hubbard,  of  Ludlow,  Mass.,  is  the  earliest  of  my  ancestors  that  I  can 
exactly  place.  I  find  the  names  of  John  and  John,  Jr.,  and  I  think  that 
the  latter  was  Elisha's  father.  Elisha's  wife  was  probably  Mary  or 
Eunice  Temple.  Titus  Hubbard  also  lived  in  Ludlow.  He  died  in 
Dec,  1839.  His  wife  was  Phebe  Paddelford,  of  Taunton,  Mass.  They 
were  married  Aug.  30,  1796.  John  Paddelford  Hubbard  also  lived  in 
Ludlow  .  and  died  there  Feb.  21,  1881.  His  wife  was  Harriet  Maria 
Parsons.     They  were  married  April  14,  1835.     She  died  March,  1867." 

(Unfortunately  no  record  appears  by  which  these  names  can  be 
traced.     Can  any  subscriber  help  either  of  these  inquirers  ?) 

POSTSC  I?  I  T»T. 

Like  a  never-ending  procession,  there  comes  in  at  the  last  hours  [of  closing  this  book,  from  corres- 
pondents who  have  for  various  reasons  been  prevented  from  sending  before,  much  interesting  data, 
which,  if  it  had  been  received  in  time,  would  have  been  incorporated  in  its  proper  place  under  the  several 
heads,  instead  of  under  "  Unclassified  Data."  It  is  impossible  to  keep  the  pages  open  longer.  Much  of 
this  data  is  valuable,  and  the  publisher  regrets  that  it  was  not  sent  when  asked  for,  and  that  much  of  it 
comes  loo  late  for  ample  verification  and  the  filling  of  some  blanks  which  are  necessarily  left  open. 


"  Attempt  the  end.  and  never  stand  to  doubt; 
Nothing's  so  hard  but  search  will  find  it  out." 

This  very  complete  index  is  one  of  the  most  important  parts  of  the  work, 
as  it  rives  the  "clue  "  to  all  names  of  Hubbards,  and  the  families  into  which 
they  have  married  on  both  sides.  Its  preparation  was  very  laborious, 
extra  care  being  used  to  make  it  as  per  feet  as  possible.  Over  fifteen 
thousand  names  were  written  on  slips  of  paper  and  these  had  to  be  handled 
over  several  times  toassort  properly — taking  over  sixty  working  days'  time! 

All  names  in  general  matter  (not  otherwise  classified)  will  be  found 
in  the  first  part.  Following  this,  indexed  by  themselves  under  special 
heads,  are  the  branches  treated  of  in  the  fourteen  special  chapters; 
viz..  Descendants  of  the  following  families: 

BOOK  PACK.   INDEX  PAGE. 

Daniel  Hubbard  and  Elizabeth  Jordan 255  468 

Edmund  Hobart  of  Hingham,  Mass 149  469 

( je< >rge  Hubbard  of  Guilford,  Ct 199  47 1 

( re< frge  Hubbard  of  Middletown,  Ct 269  47 1 

Hulberd  and  Hulbard-Hubbards 71  478 

lames  Hubbard  of  Gravesend,  L.I 63  478 

John  Hubbard  and  Mary  Merriam 213  480 

John  Hubbard  of  Pomfret,  Ct 74  4«6 

Philip  Hubbard  of  Kitterv,  Me 102  487 

Rev.  William  Hubbard  and  Mary  Rogers 181  493 

Richard  Hubbard  of  Salisbury,  Mass 85  49° 

Virginia  Hubbards 79  491 

William  Hubbard  of  Ipswich,  Mass 167  492 

William  Hubbard  and  Abigail  Dudley 264  492 

Postscript  of  Late  Addenda 495 

When  a  name  is  repeated  on  a  page,  it  is  indexed  only  once.  Of  course, 
the  same  name  may  not  apply  to  the  same  person. 

All  names  marked  with  an  asterisk  (*)  are  "  Half-Hubbards,"  or  those 
whose  mothers  were  Hubbards  by  birth. 

All  names  marked  with  a  dagger  (+)  are  "  Quarter-Hubbards,"  or 
those  whose  fathers  or  mothers  were  "Half-Hubbards,"  and  in  some 
few  cases  still  further  removed. 

All  names  in  parenthesis  are  the  maiden  names,  and  if  one  or  more 
marriages  occurred,  such  name  or  names  follow  the  maiden  name. 
455 


GENERAL   FAMILY   INDEX. 


Abridged  Lines  of  Descent,  353 
Adderly,  Thomas,  42 
Addington.  Dowager  Lady,  44 

—  Manor,  44,  45 
vElla,  19,  20 

Alfred  the  Great.  19,  20 
Allen,  Aaron,  415 

—  Abigail  (Hubbard),  415 

—  John,  59 
Ailing.  John  W..  324 
Ambitious  Nomenclature,  344 
American  Patriotic  Societies,  418 
Ancient  love  letter,  413 
Andry,  Sir  John  W.,  43 

Anne,  Queen,  39 

Armstrong,  Maria  (Benney),  403 

—  William.  403 
Arnold's  Expedition,  423 
Arnold,  Dorcas  (Hubbard),  392 

—  Samuel,  392 
Arthur,  Chester  Alan,  25 

—  William,  25 

Autographs  of  Hnbbards,  404 
Ayer,  Caroline  (Hubbard),  426 

—  L.  C,  427 
Aztec  Club,  418 
Backus,  Isaac,  54 
Bacon,  Lord,  39 

—  Michael.  4™ 
Bacseg,  King,  20 

Badger,  Mary  (Hubbard),  428 
Badges  American  Patriotic  Societies, 

421 
Barker.  Christopher.  35 

—  Clemency  (Hubbard;,  45 

—  George,  45 

—  J.  T.,  427 

—  Zuilee  (Hubbard),  427 
Barnes.  James.  415 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard).  415 
Baron,  Addington,  17,  44,  45 
Barrett,  Elizabeth  (Carlton),  318 

—  Leonard. 370 

—  Oliver,  318 

Barstow,  Ann  (Hubbard),  48 

—  Deborah,  *48 

—  George.  48 

—  John.  48 

—  Joseph,  *48 

—  Martha,  *4S 

—  Mary,  *48 

—  Patience,  *48 

—  Sarah,  *4S 

—  William,  *48 

Bates,  Isaac  Chapman,  314 
Battle  of  Hubbardton,  Vt.,  123 
Baughman.  John  A..  384 

—  Sarah  (Harvey),  384 
Beaumont.  Alexander,  377 

—  James,  377 

—  Mary  (Ricker),  377 

Bell,  Alexander  Graham,  341 

—  Charles  James,  *341 

—  Edward,  *341 

—  Elsie  May.  *341 

—  Gardiner  Hubbard.  *341 

—  Grace,  *341 

—  Grace  Blatchford  (Hubbard),  341 

—  Helen  Aidene,  *341 

—  Mabel  Gardiner  (Hubbard),  341 

—  Marian  Hubbard,  *341 

—  Robert,  39,  *341 

456 


Bell,  Robert  Wolcott.  *341 
-  Roberta  Walcott  (Hubbard),  341 
Bennett,  Elizabeth,  1372 

—  Frances  Cornelia  (Strader),  *372 

—  Grace  Strader,  +312 

—  Roger  W.,  372 

—  Wilson  Sumner,  +373 
Berry,  .lane  (Hubbard).  436 
Bertie,  Lord  Vere,  42 

—  Robert  Vere,  42 
Bibles.  207 

Blake,  Ampiias,  360 

—  John.  360 

—  Mary  ( Paine) ,  360 

—  Nathan,  360 

—  Robert.  360 

Blatchford,  Alice  Windeatt,  *335 

—  Caroline  Hubbard,  *335 

—  Edgcumb  Heath.  335 

—  Ethlinda  Jane,  *335 

—  Grace  Vernon,  *335 

—  Henry.  335 

—  Mary  Anne  (Hubbard),  335 

—  Mary  Kdgcomb,  *335 
Blaverhassett,  John,  38 
Blish.  Abraham.  56 

—  Susanah  (Tuthill),  5C 
Bourke,  Edmund,  42 

Bowers.  Caroline  Georgette,  *386 

—  Hannah  Sophia,  *386 

—  James  Ornable,  *38l> 

—  Marv  Ann  (Hubbard),  386 

—  Sarah  Fidelia,  *3S6 

—  William,  386 
Bowes,  Nicholas.  53 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  53 
Boynton,  Edward  C,  371 

—  Mary  J.  (Hubbard),  371 
Bradley,   Levi.  323 

—  N.  L.,  323 
Bradshaw,  William,  415 
Bradv,  Alice  Chamberlin,  *334 

—  Anna  Gill  (Hubbard),  334 

—  Chester  Hubbard.  *334 

—  Ethel  Russell,  *334 

—  Hester  Virginia,  *334 

—  John.  415 

—  Joseph  Caldwell,  334 

—  Marian  Pallister.  *334 

—  Marjory  Neave,  *334 

—  Mildred,  *334 
Brandish,  John.  *53 

—  Rachel  (Hubbard),  53 
Brave  Hubbards,  408 
Bridgman.  Thomas,  56 
Bristow,  John,  42 

—  Robert,  41 
Rrittiffe,  Robert,  41 
Brooks,  Daniel,  376 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  50 

—  Richard.  53 
Broumel,  James,  350 
Brown,  Benjamin,  354 

—  Eliza  Ro^s  (Hubbard).  354 

—  Fannie  A.  (Wilder),  *197 

—  John  Fenner,  107 

—  Sarah  Ross,  *354 
Buck.  Alice,  *335 

—  Edward.  335 

—  Elizabeth  Greene  (Hubbard),  335 

—  Mary  W.  lLowrie),  335 

—  Walter,  *335 


Bunce,  Grace,  *3S0 

—  James,  *3S0 

—  James  Hough.  880 

—  Mary  Anna  (Hubbard),  379,  380 

—  Mary  Emeline,  *380 

—  Marv  (Hubbard),  247 

—  Richard.  *380 
Burdiek,  Benjamin,  *55 

—  Deborah,  *55 

—  Hubbard,  *55 

—  Robert,  *55 

—  Ruth  (Hubbard),  55 

—  Samuel,  *55 

—  Taey,  *55 

—  Thomas,  *55 

Burr.  Catherine  (Ten  Eyck),  383 

—  William  M.,  383 

Butler,  Gratis  (Hubbard),  427 

—  John,  427 

—  Otis.  *427 

Cameron,  Catharine  Louisa  (Hobart), 
43 

—  Donald,  43 

Carr,  Rt.  Rev.  Thomas.  43 
Carrington.  Hannah,  49 

—  Stocdell.  49 
Cateneo,  Horace,  42 
Catharine  II.,  41 

Chalker,  Martha  Hunt  (Hubbard),  373 

—  Samuel  IC,  373 
Chamberlain,  Bruce  H..  332 

—  Inez  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  332 
Champion.  Epapnroditus.  244 

—  Lucretia  (Hubbard),  244 
Champney,  Daniel,  *54 

—  Dorcas,  53 

—  Esther,  *54 

—  Joseph.  *.">4 

—  .Mary.  *.">4 

—  Richard.  *54 

—  Samuel.  *54 

—  Sarah.  *54 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard).  54 
Channel.  Hannah  (Hubbard),  3S6 

—  Hannah  Maria.  *3SB 

—  James  C  386 
Charlemagne,  18 

Charles  I.,  40 

—  II.,  40 

—  Prince  of  Wales.  30 
Chase.  Francis,  39u 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard).  390 

—  Sarah  (Pike),  390 
Churchill,  Maj.Gen.,41 
Clancy,  Edward,  358 

—  Maria  Louise  (Gibborne),  358 
Clark,  Caleb.  415 

—  Deborah,  415 

—  Deborah  (— ?)  Hobart,  415 

—  Elizabeth,  415 

—  Esther  (Hubbard),  426 

—  Hobart,  415 

—  Hugh.  415 

—  John,  415 

—  Mary,  415 

—  Peter.  415 

—  Samuel.  415 

—  Seth.  426 
Clarke,  Bethiah,  *55 

—  Bethiah  (Hubbard),  55 

—  John.  *55 

—  John  Hopkins,  322 


INDEX. 


457 


Clarke.  Joseph,  54.  *55 

—  Judith.  *55 

—  Mary,  *55 

—  Samuel,  *55 

—  Susanah,  *55 

—  Susan  Carriugton,  322 

—  Thomas,  50.  *55 

—  William,  *55 
i  loas,  Marv,  59 

—  Mary  (—'!),  59 

—  Samuel,  59 
Coats  of  Arms,  29 
Coit,  EHsha,  385 

—  Rebecca  Man  waring,  335 
College  Gradual es,  97 

Collins.    Elizabeth  Anne    (Hubbard), 
348 

—  Peter  X.,  348 
Comte  de  i  Iraase,  -43 
Conant.  Abel.  325 

—  Ann  E.,  *326 

—  George.  *825 

—  Harriet.  *325 

—  Harriet  (Hubbard),  325 

—  Horace  J..  *325 

—  James  Edward.  *325 

—  John.  * :!25 

—  Maria.  *325 

—  Sarah  Isabel le.  *325 
Cone,  Elizabeth  (Cook),  426 

—  Enoch,  426 

—  Polly  (I'inneo).  344 

—  Salmon,  314 
Connolly.  William,  41 
CooK,  John,  366 

Marv  (Morrisi.  366 
Cooke.  Dr.  A..  43 
Coomb*.  Eleanor  (Hubbard),  374 

—  Samuel,  374 

r.  John,  54 

—  Robert,  48,  54 
Cornwallis.  Lord,  165 

Cottle.  Anna  Atwater  (Hubbard),  364 

—  William  Mayhew,  364 
Countess  of  Suffolk.  41 
Cowles,  Esther  (Hubbard),  390 

—  Sarah  t  Hubbard),  429 

—  Seth.  390 

—  Shubal.  429 
Crandall,  John,  55 
Crews,  Susanna,  388 
Crocker.  Adelia  (Foster),  365 

-•'.  3ti5 
Cromwell.  Oliver.  53 
Cull,  Alexander.  373 

—  Catherine  Lyman  (Hubbard).  373 
Curtis,  John  Hubbard,  *318 

—  Jonathan,  318 

—  Martha  (Barker),  318 

—  Thomas  Hamlin.  *318 

—  Thomas  W.  Thompson,  318 

—  Virginia  Hamlin  (  Hubbard  I,  318 
Daughters   of   the  American  Revolu- 
tion. 420 

—  of  the  Revolution.  422 
Davenport,  Capt.  Nathaniel.  53 
Davis,  Anson  Riley,  363 

—  Maria  Sahra  (Risley),  362 

—  Marv  Newton  (Ailing),  363 

—  William  Whitney.  362 
Dawson.  James.  415 

—  Rachel  (Hubbard),  415 

hard  K..  43 
Day.  Athburton.  *430 

—  i  hanneey.  *430 

—  Edward  Parsons,  381 

—  Edward  Warren.  *381 

—  Kri  Hubbard,  *430 

—  Fannv.  *430 

—  Harriet  (Hubbard),  381 

—  Lavinln  (  Hubbard),  430 

—  Phebe.  *!"() 

—  Philetlls.  *4-\0 


Dav,  Polona.  *430 

—  Russell,  43  l 

—  Volney,  *430 
Dean,  Aaron,  319 

—  L'hyla  (-■>),  319 

—  of  Windsor,  43 
Defenders  of  the  Union,  175 
Dennis.  Hannah  (  Hubbard),  60 

—  John.  60 

—  Lois(Hibbert).  60 
Dethick,  Sir  Gilbert,  35 
Drury,  Sir  Thorn. is.  41 
Dudley,  Thomas,  50 
Dunmore,  Lord,  105 
Earl  of  Bridgewater,  39 

—  of  Buckingham,  41,  42 

—  of  Leicester.  39 

—  of  Suffolk.  41 
Early  Settlers.  47 
Eaton.  Benjamin,  60 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard).  60 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  390 

—  Thomas,  390 
Eden.  William.  42 
Edgerton,  John,  39 
Edward  III.,  King,  211 
Egbert,   King.  19 
Egremont,  Godfrey  43 
Eldridge,  James.  319 
Elizabeth,  Queen,  35,  39,  210,  211 
E.y.  Martha  (— ?),  4T 

—  Nathaniel,  47 
Emery.  Daniel,  420 

—  Rebecca  (Chase).  426 

—  Tlieodosia  (— ?),  377 

—  Thomas.  377 

English  Hubbards  and  Hobarts,  37 
Ethelbald,  19 
Ethel  bert,  1!) 
Ethelred.  King.  19.  20 
F.thelwulf.  King.  17.  19 
Everest,  Charles  M  irvin,  4J9 

—  Janet  Cornelia.  *429 

—  Jessie  Hiram.  429 

—  Je-sie  (Wilson),  429 

—  Raymond  Wilson.  429 

—  Ruth  Hartwell,  *429 

—  Sherman  Hubbard,  *  129 

—  Sophie  Todd  (Hubbard),  429 
Fairfield.  John.  415 

—  Patty  (Hubbard).  415 
Famiiv  Records,  following  index 
Field."  Albert,  370 

—  George  Albert.  370 

Fitch,  Beulah  (Hubbard).  430 

—  Daniel.  430 

—  E/.ia,  100 

—  German.  *430 

—  Gertrude,  *430 

—  Levansy,  *430 

Fitfield,  Benjamin  Franklin,  360 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  300 

—  Orange.  300 
Fletcher.  Abel.  427 

—  Charlotte  H.  (Hubbard),  427 

—  Joel,    127 

—  Lttcv  (Hubbard),  427 
Flint,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  60 

—  Timothy,  00 

For.l.  Maria  L.  (Hubbard),  98 

—  Rev.  L.  C.  98 
Franklin    Benjamin.  57,  5s 

—  Elizabeth  (Hooch)  Hubbard,  57 

—  James    57 

—  John.  57.  58 
Frisbie,  David.  427 

—  Marilla  (Hubbard).  427 
Froissart,  Sir  John.  Chronicles,  31 
Frost  Albert,  *428 

—  Charles  Hubbard,  *428 

—  Ellen.  *428 

—  Ellen  (Hubbard),  42s 

—  Emma,  *428 


Frost,  Osgood,  *428 

—  Rufus.  *428 

—  Rufus  S.,  428 

Fronde,  James  Anthony,  31 
Fullerton,  Maria  (Hubbard),  315 
-  Thomas,  315 

—  William  Hubbard.  *315 
Furniss.  Piudence  (Hubbard),  5> 

—  Thomas,  58 
Gtege,  Ebenezer,  49 

Gallup,  Emily  Taylor  (Hubbard),  311 

—  Jam.  s  A.,  311 

Gardner,  Celia  Lull   (Hubbard  i.  442, 
443 

—  Rev.  George  Warren.  442,  443 
Garrison,  Joseph  Shermer,  349 

—  T.  May  (Hubbard).  349.  351 
Gates,  Herman.  35<i 

—  Susan  i  Hall),  366 
Oaylord,  Samuel.  2-13 
George  II..  41 
Gilchrist,  John  James.  319 

—  Sarah  Dean  i  Hubbard),  319 
Giles.  Eusebius,  J.30 

—  Hurlburt.  *4' 0 
Gillette,  Augusta  P..  *335 

—  Elizabeth  M..  *335 

—  Florence,  *335 

—  Grace  W.,  *335 

—  Joanna  H.,  *335 

—  Joanna  Perkins  (Hubbard).  335 

—  Philo  A..  335 

—  Samuel  H..  *335 

Glenn,  Mrs.  William  (Hubbard).  435 
Glover,  John.  60 

—  Jonathan.  60 

Gooch,  Elizabeth  (Peck),  56 

—  James.  50   57 

—  Sarah  (Tuthill).  56 

—  William,  57 

!  Good  old  forefather.  412 
Goodladd.  Richard    53 
Goudey,  George.  59 
Goudy,  Hannah  (Hubbard),  59 
Gould.  Henry  Rees,  372 

—  Mary  Catherine  (Strader),  *372 
Grant,  Colquohoun.  43,  44 
Graves.  Abigail  (Pomerov).  361 

—  Charles  E.,  360 

—  Josiah  Dwight.  T61 

—  Mary  Ann  (—  »),  300 
Grav.  Thomas,  319 

Grealey,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard).  59 

—  Peter,  59 
Grei  u,  John,  50 

—  Nathaniel,  342 

Greene,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard).  335 

—  Gardiner,  335 

Griggs,  Charlotte  (Hubbard).  105 
Grossmann,  Gertrude  M.,  *341 

—  Gertrude  McCurdy  (Hubbard),  341 

—  Maurice  V.,  341 

Guizot's  History  of  France.  IS 
Haigh.  Henry.  :ls_| 

—  Martha  [Murray),  384 
Halfdan,  Is 
Halkerston,  .lames,  414 

—  Margaret  (  Hubbard),  414 
Hall,  Anna  (Wilcox),  49 

—  Celinda  (Hubbard),  430 

—  Franklin.  *430 

—  George.  *430 

—  George  R  .  430 

—  Henry.  *430 

—  Hermanns.  *430 

—  Jared.  *430 

—  John,  49 

—  Maria,  *430 

—  Marv,  *430 

—  Phebe  (Hubbard).  263 

—  Seth  S..  863 
Hamilton    Alexander,  343 
Hammond.  Col  .    I1 


458 


HUBBARD   HISTORY  AND    GENEALOGY. 


Hampden,  John,  -10 
Hancock,  John,  57 

—  Samuel,  389 

—  Tabitha  (Champney),  389 
Hare,  William,  38 
Harold,  20 

Haskell,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  428 

—  Alice,  *42S 

—  Charity  (— ?),  58 

—  Mark,  58 

—  Susannah  (Hubbard),  58 
Hastings,  Alice,  4211 

—  Courtlandt  E..  429 

—  Florence  (Hubbard),  429 

—  Justin.  318 

—  Lillian,  429 

Hayden,  Martha  (Hubbard),  263 

—  Uriah,  263 
Haydon,  Henry,  3S 
Haynes,  Carrie  ( L — ).  377 

—  Edward  Bigelow,  377 
Hebard,  Nathaniel,  390 
Henry,  Piince  of  Wales.  :,9 

—  VII.  King,  31,  35.  37, 
Herald's  Collrge,  ^onion,  29,  35 
Herbert,  William.  59 
Herrich,  Amelia.  *428 

—  Charles  Hubbard.  * 428 

—  James  Amory,  *42s 

—  Jane  Amelia  (Hubbard),  428 

—  Moses  A.,  428 

—  Rufus  Frost,  *428 

—  William,  *428 
Heymen,  Sir  Peter,  38 
Hibbert,  Anna  (— ?)  Dugard,  60 

—  Joseph.  60 

—  Lois,  60 

—  Mary  (Lyons),  60 
Hibbins,  William,  47 
Hibbut,  John,  415 

— Rebecca  (Gordon),  415 
Hill.  Elizabeth  i  Isaacs),  328 

—  Thaddeus.  328 
Hingua.  IS,  19.  20,  24,  27 
Hingvar,  18 

Hiscox.  William,  55 
Hitchins,  Elkanah.  60 

—  Jane  (Hubbard),  till 

Hoadley,    Amelia   Orpha    (Hubbard), 
197 

—  Charles.  *197 

—  George,  *197 

—  Horace  Philemon,  197 
Hobart.  Aaron,  131 

—  Albinia  (Bertie),  42 

—  Albinia  Frances,  43 

—  Albinia  Jane   42 

—  Albinia  Mary,  43 

—  Alice,  3s 

—  Ann  (Ratcliff),  38 

—  Anna  Catharine,  42 

—  Anna  Margaret  (Bristow),  42 

—  Anne  (Haydon),  3s 

—  Anne  (Tilney),  88 

—  Audrey  (  Hare).  3s 

—  Augustus  Charles,  43 

—  Augustus  Edward,  42,  43,  44 

—  Benjamin,  43,  131 

—  Caleb,  181 

—  Catharine  Annesly  (Carr),  43 

—  Catharine  (Cooke),  43 

—  Catharine  Louisa,  43 

—  Caroline,  41 

—  Caroline  (Connolly),  41,  42 

—  Charles,  42,  43 

—  Charles  Edward.  43 

—  Charlotte  Augusta.  44 

—  Charlotte  Selina  (Moore),  43 

—  Daniel.  131 

—  Deborah  (-?),  415 

—  Dorothy,  39 

—  Dorothy  (Bell),  39,  41 

—  Ebi-nezer,  415 


Hobart,  Edith  Kathleen  (Hore),  44 

—  Edmund,  of    Hingham.  Mar-s.,  De- 

scendants of,  149.     (.sec   Special 
Index) 

—  Edmund,  38,  39, 128,  131,  396 

—  Eleanor,  43 

—  Eleanor  Agnes,  44 

—  Eleanor  Agnes  (Eden),  42 

—  Eleanor  (Blaverhassett),  38 

—  Eli.   131 

—  Elijah,  131 

—  Elizabeth,  39 

—  Elizabeth  (— ?),  38 

—  Elizabeth  (Bristow),  41,  42 

—  Emily  Anne,  41 

—  Frances,  39 

—  Frederick  John,  43 

—  George,  41,  42,  43 

—  George  Augustus,  43 

—  George  Bertie,  43 

—  George  Robert,  42,  43 

—  George  Vere,  42,  43 

—  Georgia na  Mary, "43 

—  Gershom,  lol 

—  Hannah,  415 

—  Harriet,  41,  43 

—  Hawkes,  131 

—  Henrietta,  4o,  41 

—  Henry  Lewis,  42,  43 

—  Horace  Miles.  43 

—  Humphrey,  131 

—  Isaac,  131 

—  Israel,  131 

—  James,  131 

—  Jane  (Audry),  43 

—  Jane  (Cateneo),  42.  43 

—  Janet  (McLean),  43 

—  Japhet,  lol,  131 

—  Jeremiah,  Ml,  131 

—  John,  131,  415 

—  John  Henry.  390 

—  Jonathan,  131 

—  Joseph,  131 

—  Joshua,  101,  131 

—  Josiah,  131 

—  Judith  (Brittiffe),  41 

—  Louisa  Charlotte.  43 

—  Louisa  Selina,  44 

—  I.ady  Frances  i  Edgerton),  39 

—  Lady  (Maynard),  41 

—  Lady  Philippa  (Sidney  I,  39 

—  Magaretta  (llourke),  Adderly,  42 

—  Maria  Adelaide,  13 

—  Maria  Anne,  42 

—  Maria  Catharine.  43.   11 

—  Maria  Isabella  (Egremont),  43 

—  Marian  (Dawson  I,  43 

—  Mary,  39 

—  Mary  Anne  (Drury),  41 

—  Mary  Anne  (Grant),  43.  44 

—  Mary  Catharine  (Carr),  43 

—  Mary  (Hampden)  Hammond,  40 

—  Mary  (Williams),  43,  44 

—  Moses,  390 

—  Nathaniel,  131 

—  Nehemiah,  101,  131 

—  Noah,  101,  131.  415 

—  Patience  <— ?),  415 

—  Peter,  131 

—  Robert,  42 

—  Robert  Henry,  43 

—  Ruth,  415 

—  Samuel.  131 

—  Sarah  Albinia  Louisa,  42 

—  Sarah  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  386 

—  Seth,  131 

—  Shebuel.  131 

—  Shelewell,  131 

—  Simon,  131 

—  Sir  Henry.  38,  39,  40,  41,  42 

—  Sir  James.  38 

—  Sir  John.  38,  89  40,  41,  42 

—  Sir  Miles,  38 


Hobart.  Sir  Thomas,  38,  39,  40 

—  Sir  Walter,  38 

—  Sofia,  41 

—  Sophia  Ann,  43 

—  Stephen.   131 

—  Snkey,  415 

—  Susan  (Peyton ),  38 

—  Vere  Henry,  43 

—  William,  40,  131 

—  William  Arthur,  43 
Hobbert,  Elizabeth.  50 
Hobert,  Benjamin,  49 

—  Elizabeth,  49 

—  Hannah,  49 

—  Rachell,  49 

—  Richard,  49 

—  Sarah.  49 
Holmes,  Obadiah,  55 

—  Sally  (Graves),  302 

—  Thomas.  362 
Homesteads,  243 

Hooper,  Betsey  (Hubbard),  426 

—  James,  426 
Hopkins.  Esek,  322 

—  Stephen,  322 

Hore,  Herbert  Francis,  44 
Horton,  Benjamin,  429 

—  Cecelia  Ann  I  Mapes),  *429 
Hotesse,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  389 

—  Paul  (Otis),  389 

How  to  Subdue  (lenealogists,  445 
Howe,  Annie.  +57 

—  Caroline,  +57 

—  Florence,  +57 
--  George,  57 

—  Judith  Ray  (Sawyer),  *57 
Hoyt,  Margaret  (Hubbard),  426 

—  Peasley.  426 

—  Sarah  (  Hubbard),  426 
Hubard,  Boiling.  1(>0 

—  Edmund  Wilcox,  Jr.,  100 

—  James,  100 

—  James  L.,  100 

—  J.  Lighten,  100 

—  James  Robert,  Jr.,  100 

—  John  Eppes,  100 

—  Robert  Thurston,  Jr.,  99,  100 

—  Tazewell  T.,  100 

—  William  Boiling,  lull 

Hubba,  King,  18,  19,  20.  24,  27,  37" 
Hubbard,  A.  W.,  267 

—  Aaron,  127,  131.  268,  415 

—  Aaron  Dean.  319 

—  Abbey  Jane  (Wells).  332 

—  Abby  Ann  (  Bradley),  322 

—  Abel.  124,  127.  131.  423 

—  Abigail,  60.  361,  415,  427.  428 

—  Abigail  (Carke),  415 

—  Abigail  (Dickinson),  320 

—  Abigail  (Grover).  OH 

—  Abigail  (Rumble).  427 

—  Abigail  (Sage),  S29 

—  Abijah,  127,  132,  427 

—  Abner.  127.  132 

—  Abraham.  47 

—  Achsah  IGraves).  101 

—  Addison  Thomas.  301,  352 

—  Adelaide  Louise  (Gould).  356- 

—  Adele  Louise  (Constans).  97 

—  Adelia  Anna  (Crocker),  365 

—  Adeline  (Lippincote).  429 

—  Adley,  347 

—  Adolphus  Skinner,  357 

—  Agnes.  197 

—  Agnes  H.  (Waterbury).  386 

—  Ahira.  330 

—  Albert,  379.  438 

—  Albert  A.,  175 

—  Albert  Allen.  378,  379 

—  Albeit  S.,  438 

—  Albert  Trvon.  320 
-  Albert  Wells,  101 

—  Alexander,  332 


IXDEX. 


459 


Hubbard.  Alfred  Joel,  381 

—  Alfred  Straw,  377 

—  Alice,  3!S4 

■ —  Alice  Eliza,  44 

—  Alice  Frances.  336 

—  Alice  Frances  (Hammond),  336 

—  Alice  J.,  98 

—  Alice  Read,  365 

—  Alice  (Ward).  49,  50 

—  Allen,  100   132 

—  Alma  Russell,  334 

—  Almira.  9S 

—  Almira  T.,  320 

—  Almira  T.  (Hubbard),  320 

—  Alonzo,  175 

—  Alonzo  H.,  175 

—  Alva,  348 

—  Amanda  (Lewis),  440 

—  Amase,  132 

—  Amelia  Jane  (Ripley),  428 

—  Amelia  Orpha,  197 

—  Amelia  (Thomas),  327 

—  Amos.  59,  00,  124,  132 

—  Amos  Fiske,  361 

—  Amos  Graves,  361 

—  Amos  Holland.  361 

—  Amy  d'Esterre  (Huntley),  45 

—  Andrew  J.,  175 

—  Andromedia,  44U 

—  Ann,  47,  48,  403 

—  Ann  Armstrong  (Greer),  334 

—  Ann  E.,  403 

—  Ann  Electa,  332 

—  Ann  Elizabeth.  4*3 

—  Ann  (  Ireer,  334 

—  Ann  Medora  (Straw),  377 

—  Anna,  244,   263,  332,  348,   384.  426, 

42s 

—  Anna  (— ':),  430 

—  Anna  Atwater,  364 

—  Anna  (Balkan,  317 

—  Anna  (I)owne),  57 

—  Anna  Eliza  (Davis),  362 

—  Anna  Elizabeth  (Chamberlin),  334 

—  Anna  Poster  (  Burr).  383 

—  Anna  i  Frothingham).  319 

—  Anna  Georgians  (Knight),  384 

—  Anna  Gill,  334 

—  Anna  i  Hines),  101 

—  Anna  Moore,  334 

—  Anna  W..427 

—  Anna  Weir.  315 

—  Anne.  1(15.  388,  395 

—  Anne  (Catliu),  330 

—  Anne  (Crews).  388 

—  Anne  (Hunt).  372,  373 

—  Anne  (Pomeroy).  368 

—  Anne  Ward  (Ballou),  357 

—  Annie  Christine  (Hasty).  356 

—  Annie  Elizabeth  (Lee),  367,  368 

—  Annie  Qracie,  386 

—  Annie  Louise  Field.  370 

—  Annis  Melinda.  375 

—  Annis  (Whipple),  307 

—  Anson,  100 

—  Anthony,  47 

—  Antis.  393 

—  Appleton  Burnham.  3."5,  358 

—  Arabella  Gratia  (Blake),  360 

—  Archer  Stanford,  390 

—  Artemas.  423 

—  Arthur,  385.  438 

—  Arthur  Dudley.  374 

—  Arthur  Gellib'rand,  45 

—  Arthur  Greer.  334 

—  Arthur  J.,  438 

—  Arville  (Byer),  430 

—  Asa.  320 

—  Asahel,  441 

—  Asahel  Wheeler,  312 

—  Asenatli,  430 

—  Asenath  (Dorman),  333 

—  Altai,   132 


Hubbard,  Attrissa.  438 

—  Augustus,  175 

—  Augustus  M.,  175 

—  Austin,  175 

—  Austin  O.,  100 

—  Austin  Osgood,  203 

—  Austinius  O.,  210 

—  Autographs,  404 

—  Bailey,  132 

—  Bartholomew,  132 

—  Bashtiua,  426 

—  Bela,  98.  100, 164,  245, 314,  328,  3S3, 

3S4.  392,  404 

—  Benjamin,    49,    126,   127,    132,  319, 

414 

—  Benjamin  Farley,  386 

—  Benjamin  P.,  99 

—  Benjamin  Russell,  319 

—  Benjamin  T..  99 

—  Benjamin  Vestal,  385 

—  Benjamin  West,  355 

—  Bertha  May,  ':fi4 

—  Bethiah,  54.  55 

—  Betsey,  361.  fc62,  395,  426,  4-J7 

—  Betsey  (Gray),  319 

—  Betsey  (Hubbard  i,  361,  362 

—  Betsev  Louisa  (Clark),  355,  358 

—  Betsey  (Parker),  430 

—  Beulah,  430 

—  Beulah  D„  317 

—  Blanche  Elizabeth,  440 

—  Bulia  F.,  430 

—  C.  D..404 

—  C.  L.,  267,  404 

—  C.  R.,  404 

—  C.  S.,  404 

—  Caleb,  3-.  127,  132,  133.  212,  427 

—  Calvin,  268 

—  Capin,  428 

—  Carleton  Waterbury.  386 

—  Carlton  Spencer,  439 

—  Caroline.  314.  S35,  426,  43S 

—  Caroline  (  Barnes  ),  428 

—  Caroline  Chase  (Colby).  356 

—  Caroline  Dennie  (Tracy),  336 

—  Caroline  Frances,  377 

—  Caroline  (  Franklin),  312 

—  Caroline  (Thompson),  376 
■ —  Carrie.  32  I 

—  Carrie  Anna,  440 

—  Carrie  Newton  (Haynes).  377 

—  Catharine  (Pennoyer),  373 

—  Catherine,  57.  319.  325,  372.  393 

—  Catherine  A.  (Patterson),  317 

—  Catherine  Almira,  373 

—  Catherine  Lyman,  373 

—  Cecil  John,  45 

—  Celia.  348 

—  Celia  Lull,  442,  443 

—  Celinda,  430 

—  Charissa,  361 

—  (  harissa  (Graves),  361 

—  Charity,  373 

—  Charity  (Hubbard),  373 

—  Charity  (Mill),  373 

—  Charles,    207,    267,   320.    324,    347, 

:;ii.r.,  3ti(i,  421.  42S.  429,  430,  44o 

—  Charles  A..  99.  175.  4()4 

—  Charles  Appleton,  355 

—  Charles  C.  212 

—  Charles  Dtinlap.  429 

—  Charles  E..  100.  175 

—  Charles  E.  G..  197 

—  Charles  Eustis,  336 

—  Charles  F.,  4u4.  427 

—  Charles  Foster,  365 

—  Charles  Frederick,  327 

—  Charles  G.,  175 

—  Charles  H.,  100,  175 

—  Charles  Hobby,  56.  133 

—  Charles  Joseph,  lol 

—  Charles  L.,  99.  loo,  403 

—  Charles  M.,  175 


Hubbard,  Charles  Parker,  335 

—  Charles  Pitcher,  429 

—  Charles  Putnam,  378.  :;79 

—  Charles  Thacher.  Id 

—  Charles  Wells,  lol 

—  Charlotte,  105,  4i.", 

—  Charlotte  Amelia,  427 

—  Charlotte  Armitage,  ':ti>S 

—  Charlotte  E.  (Robertson),  429 

—  Charlotte  Elizabeth.  326 

—  Charlotte  H.,  4-'T 

—  Charlotte  (Moody),  :.74 

—  Charlotte  Peck,  353 

—  Charlotte  Rosella  (McDonough),326 

—  Chauncey  B.,  175 

—  Chauncey  G..  99 

—  Chauncey  H.,  100 

—  Chester  Dorman,  99.  333 

—  Chester  Russell,  .'184 

—  Chloe(Goodell),  100 

—  Chk.e  (Gray)  Eldridge,  319 

—  Christian,  124 

—  Christopher  B..  4o3 

—  Cinthia  (Smith).  443 

—  Clara  Ann.  325 

—  Clara  Augusta,  377 

—  Clarence.  379 

■ —  Clarence  Dana.  !  64 

—  Clarissa.  325 

—  Clarissa  (Clapp),  3H 

—  Clarissa  (Sybrant),  438 

—  Clarissa  Whitmore,  324 

—  Clark.  133 

—  Claud,  414 

—  Clemency.  45 

—  Clementine  (Roff),  438 

—  Clifford.  175 

—  Clinton  Terlev,  99 

—  Collins  B.,  404 

■ —  Collins  Baughman.  384 

—  Colnian  Smith.  365.  4:J,9.  443 

—  Content  (Guernsey).  314 

—  Cora  L.  (Kennedy/.  i!17 

—  Cora  Lee.  317 

—  Cornelia,  o44.  429 

—  Cornelia  E..  404 

—  Cornelia  Frances,  871 

—  Cornelia  (Hartwell  I,  429 

—  Cornelia  M.  (Aldrich).  427 

—  Cornelia  Willis,  341,  344 

—  Cyrus  C,  176 

—  D.  B..  404 

—  Daisy  Fern,  364 

—  Dana,  333 

—  Dana  List,  334 

—  Daniel.  47,  100,   101,  127.  133,  164, 

244,  245,    32s,  393,   400,   413,  414, 
422.  428 

—  Daniel  and  Elizabeth  (Jordan),  De- 

scendants of,  255.      (See  Special 
Ind.  ./•  i 

—  Daniel  B.,  ISO 

—  Daniel  Brooks,  376 

—  Daniel  C,  176 

—  Daniel  J.,  404 

—  Daniel  R..  170 

—  Daniel  Roberts.  97,  357 

—  Daphne  (Bushnell),  332 

—  Daphne  L.,  332 

—  Darius,  344 

—  David.   100.  125.  126.  128.  133,  134, 

247.  311,  3T7,  390,  420,  440 

—  David  G..  100 

—  Deborah.  57.  415 

—  Deborah  (— ?),  245,  415 

—  Delia  S.  (Birdsey),  320 

—  Deliverance  (— ?),  59 

—  Detnas,  :J)12 

—  Dennis.  386 

—  Dencv  W.  (— ':)  Vassar,  332 

—  Denison  G.,  99 

—  Denison  H..  100 

—  Desire  G.  (Cole  i.  427 


460 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 


Hubbard,  Devere,  438 

—  Deville,  176 

—  Diana,  344.  427 

—  Diana  ( Rawson),  423 

—  Diana  Ward,  328 

—  Dickman,  101 

—  Dimion,  134 

—  Dimon,  134 

—  Dolly  Ann  (Cowles),  429 

—  Dolly  Griswold,  376 

—  Dominicus.  426 

—  Dorcas,  39-' 

—  Dorothy,  354,  414 

—  Dorothy  (— ?),  422 

—  Douglas.  47.  175,  195,  401,  404 

—  Dr.  J.,  41)4 

—  Drexel  Tenney,  386 

—  Drucilla.  430 

—  Dudley,  101,  325 

—  Dwight  Graves,  361 

—  Dwight  Lauson,  98 

—  Dyar  J..  430 

—  E.  B.,  404 

—  E.  C,  438 

—  Eben,  134 

—  Ebenezer,    49,    60,    101,    125,    134, 

412 

—  Eber.  427 

—  Eber  J.,  427 

—  Eddie  Knapp,  386 

—  Edgar.  438 

—  Edgar  R.,  438 

—  Edith  Mildred,  362 

—  Edith  Rebecca,  403 

—  Edmond,  39,  40 

—  Edmund  Clarence,  317 

—  Edmund  Wilcox,  99,  311 

—  Edna  Davis,  362 

—  Edna  11.,  427 

—  Edna  (Post),  359 

—  Edward,  35,  40,  319,  344,  347,  348, 

374 

—  Edward  Albert.  376 

—  Edward  B.,  176 

—  Edward  Burr,  314 

—  Edward  Bushnell,  332 

—  Edward  Cone,  344 

—  Edward  E.,  208 

—  Edward  Eugene,  364 

—  Edward  King,  384 

—  Edward  L.,  176 

—  Edward  Melville,  427 

—  Edward  Roswel!,  376 

—  Edward  Waite,  101 

—  Edwin,  197.  324,  332,  401 

—  Edwin  Brigham,  361 

—  Edwin  Lemuel,  197 

—  Edwin  T.,  99.  176 

—  Egerton.  44,  45 

—  Elbert  H..  100 

—  Eldad,  125 

—  Eleanor,  336,  355,  374 

—  Eleanor  Charity,  355 

—  Eleanor  (Hendrickson),  365,  366 

—  Electa,  430 

—  Electa  (Bronson),  359 

—  Electa  (Fitch),  430 

—  Elenora  ( Berry),  329 

—  Elfreda,  197 

—  Elgiva,  438 

—  ElgivaE..  438 

—  Eli,  99,  134,  323,  427 

—  Eli  A.,  98 

—  Elias,  124,  207,  365,  366 

—  Elihu,  128,  134 

—  Elijah,  100,  125,  128,  134,  176,  243, 

320,  326,  430 

—  Elijah  Jones,  385 

—  Elijah  Kent,  99 

—  Elijah  N.,  430 

—  Eliot,  319 

—  Ehphalet,  124,  128 

—  Elise  (Brooks),  373,  374 


Hubbard,  Elisha.  9s.  101,  125, 126, 128, 
134,  135,  180.  244,  247,  248 

—  Elisha  Sears.  320 

—  Eliza,  348,  366,  373,  427 

—  Eliza  (Fitch).  354 

—  Eliza  Jane,  348 

—  Eliza  N.  (Wade),  43S 

—  Eliza  Ross,  354 

—  Eliza  (Tabor),  344 

—  Elizabeth,   56.  57.    58.    59,   60,  165, 

243,  328,  335,  358,   376,  390,  400, 
414.  422,  426,  428,  436 

—  Elizabeth  (— ?),  49,  50,  164 

—  Elizabeth  Anne,  34S 

—  Elizabeth  (  Bartlett),  60 

—  Elizabeth  (Brown),  332 

—  Elizabeth  (Burger),  440 

—  Elizabeth  (Church).  311 

—  Elizabeth  Cooley  (Field),  101 

—  Elizabeth  (Cowles),  389 

—  Elizabeth  (Dudley),  325 

—  Elizabeth  (Gardner),  403 

—  Elizabeth  (Gooch).  56,  57,  58 

—  Elizabeth  Greene,  335 

—  Elizabeth  (Hastings),  315 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  426 

—  Elizabeth  (Miller),  212 

—  F.lizabeth  Pallister,  334 

—  Elizabeth  (Pierce).  415 

—  Elizabeth  Pray  (Emery),  377 

—  Elizabeth  (Roberts),  357 

—  Elizabeth  (Russell).  426 

—  Elizabeth  (Swan),  372,  373 

—  Elizabeth  (Warren),  493 

—  Elizabeth  (Watts),  212 

—  Elizabeth  Wheaton,  362 

—  Elizur.  128,  329 

—  Ellen,  376,  381.  42S  429 

—  Ellen  (Cook).  365,  366 

—  Ellon  M.,  427 

—  Ellen  Moore.  371 

—  Elmer  Elston,  404 

—  Elmer  Wilcox,  97,  357 

—  Elna,  390 

—  EInathan,  125,  128.  135 

—  Elvira  (Barclay),  379 

—  Elvira  S„  438 

—  Elvira  (Winslow),  428 

—  Emeline,  428 

—  Emily  (Holland),  361 

—  Emily  (Shaul),  430 

—  Emily  Taylor,  311 

—  Emma,  325,  426,  438 

—  Emma  (Arnold).  379 

—  Emma  (Burge),  325 

—  Emma  F.,  197 

—  Emma  Gardiner,  318 

—  Emma  L.,  9S 

—  Emma  (Wainwright).  348 

—  Emma  (Waldron),  332 

—  Enoch,  390 

—  Ephraim.  123,  125,  126,  135,  427 

—  Eppa,  124 

—  Erastus,  360.  373 

—  Eri,  430 

—  Ernest,  438 

—  Ernest  Jones,  3S5 

—  Ervin  Samuel,  361,  362 

—  Esther,  390,  426 

—  Esther  (— 1\  53 

—  Esther  (Wheeler),  312 

—  Ethel  Gladys.  362 

—  Etta  Belle  (Ross),  349 

—  Eugenie.  426 

—  Eunice  F.  (Sterns),  438 

—  Eunice  (Prout),  322 

—  Enrilla  E.,  4C3 

—  Eva  May,  332 

—  Evaline  (Adams),  381 

—  Evaline  Maude  (Portal),  45 

—  Evelyn,  45 

—  Ezekiel.  125 

—  Ezra,  429,  430 


Hubbard,  Ezra  Stiles,  311 

—  F.  Alonzo,  332 

—  F.  B.,  404 

—  F.  Louise  (Broumel),  350 

—  Fannie  (Burbank),  441 

—  Fannie  (Catlin),  312 

—  Fannie  M.,  441 

—  Fanny  (Burbank),  360 

—  Fanny  (Morton),  165 

—  Flavius  Josephus,  385 

—  Florence,  332,  428 

—  Florence  Eddy,  365 

—  Florence  Eunice,  364 

—  Florence  Gazelle  (Ives),  324 

—  Florence  Hastings,  429 

—  Florence  Mascerene,  336 

—  Florence  May,  440 

—  Fordyce  Mitchell,  98,  99,  314 

—  Frances,  165 

—  Fiances  Aurelia  (Smith),  364 

—  Frances  Cone,  344 

—  Frances  Eliza,  344 

—  Frances  Elizabeth.  314 

—  Frances  Harriet,  319 

—  Frances  Johnson,  £68 

—  Frances  Johnson  (Lambard),  368 

—  Frances  (Tabor),  311,  344 

—  Francis,  135,  385,  391,  414 

—  Francis  Edward,  44 

—  Francis  Spencer,  45 

—  Frank,  379,  428,  438 

—  Frank  A.,  404.  430 

—  Frank  Allen,  99,  lul,  368 

—  Frank  E..  100 

—  Frank  Gaylord,  98 

—  Frank  H.,  404 

—  Frank  James,  429 

—  Frank  W.,  100 

—  Frank  Wells,  332 

—  Franklin,  101,  426,  428,  429 

—  Franklin  Armstrong,  493 

—  Fred,  421.  440 

—  Fred  Scott,  377 

—  Frederic,  428 

—  Frederick,  12S,  314,  328,  332,  383. 

384.  429 
Frederick  A„  3S6 

—  Frederick  Augustus.  386 

—  Frederick  Charles,  403 

—  Frederick  Tracy,  336 

—  Gabriel,  414 

—  Gardiner  Benney,  403 

—  Gardiner  G.,  99,  404 

—  Gardiner  Greene.  98,  335,  336 

—  Genealogists,  195 

—  Genevieve  (Kenyon),  374 

—  George,  49,  100,  125,  128,  135,  176, 

195.  211,  212,  244.  245,  247.  263, 
267,  268,  312.  315.  325.  359,  377, 
394,  426,  427,  428,  429,  430,  438 

—  George,  of    Guilford,     Conn.,    De- 

scendants of  199.  (See  Special  In- 
dex) 

—  George,  of  Middletown,  Conn.,  De- 

scendants of,  269.  (See  Special 
Index) 

—  George  A.,  176,  438 

—  George  Asahel,  427 

—  George  B.,  100.  176 

—  George  C,  99,  176  • 

—  George  C,  &  Co.,  371 

—  George  D.  R.,  404 

—  George  David  Read,  439 

—  George  E.,  176 

—  George  Elijah,  99 

—  George  F.,  99,  197 

—  George  Graham,  864 

—  George  H..  99,  100,  176 

—  George  Hale.  317 

—  Gteorge  Henry,  207,  324,  364,  430 

—  George  Holland.  361 

—  George  Johonnot,  101 

—  George  M.,  176 


Hubbard.  George  Milton,  99 

—  George  N..  176 

—  George  Raymond,  332 

—  George  Stocking,  320 

—  George  T.,  178 

—  George  W..  176.  325,  371,  430 

—  George  Washington.  440 

—  George  Whipple,  3»p7 

—  George  Wyllys,  359 

—  Georgian na,  -".24 

—  Georgianna  l  Leach),  99,  323,  427 

—  Gertrude,  336 

—  Gertrude  M.  (  M<  Curdy  ),  341 

—  Gertrude  M<<  lurdy.  311 

—  Gertrude  Robbins  (Pitcher),  429 

—  Ghoran  Fitch,  354 

—  Gideon  Hay,  57 

—  (Albert  Harrison,  101 

—  Gile>,  100 

—  Glenn  C.,  427 

—  Gorham.  101,  319,  428 

—  Grace,  98,  328,  350 

—  Grace  Blatchford,  341 

—  Grace  Dunbar  (Hill),  314,  328 

—  Grace  Hill.  314 

—  Grace  Louise,  332 

—  Grace  VV.  ( Iveese),  332 

—  Gratis,  427 

—  Graves,  301 

—  Green  K.,  440 

—  Grosvenor  S.,  99 

—  Gurdon  S.,  176 

—  Gurdon  Saltonstall,  329 

—  Guy  E  irlscout.  440 

—  Guy  Homer,  3ti5,  4  l4,  445,  446 

—  H.  C,  404 

—  H.  J.,  4  >4 

—  H.  P.,  404 

—  Hannah,  50,  59,  60,  244.  3M3,  390. 

391 

—  Hannah  (— ?),  414 

—  Hannah  (Allen),  414 

—  Hannah  (Best),  373 

—  Hannah  (Burnham)  Latimer,  341 

—  Hannah  (Ives),  53 

—  Hannah  (Kent),  243 

—  Hannah  (Pitman).  59 

—  Hannah  lioot  (North).  197 

—  Hannah  (Russell),  385,  3-6 

—  Hardy,  38b 

—  Harlan  Page.  365,  405 

—  Harriet,   325,    374,    381,    401,    426, 

427.  429 

—  Harriet  (— ?).  430 

—  Harriet  A.,  98 

—  Harriet  Ann  (Barrett).  368,  370 

—  Harriet  (Armstrong),  403 

—  Harriet  Bellows,  324 

—  Harriet  (Fairchild),  3S0 

—  Harriet  (Hoyt),  426 

—  Harriet  J.  (Emery  ),  426 

—  Harriet  Louise,  427 

—  Harriet  (Mallory).  428 

—  Harriet  Woodward,  324 

—  Harrison,  176 

—  Harrison   K.,  176 

—  Harry,  101,  358,  404 

—  Harry  Beach,  364 

—  Harry  Elmer,  377 

—  Harrv  Mascerine,  101 

—  Hairy  8;  C,  332 

—  Harry  Thomas,  359 

—  Harvey,  197 

—  Harvey  Morgan,  373 

—  Hattie,  428 

—  Hattie  L.  (Knapp),  386 

—  Hawkes.  123 

—  Heard,  135 

—  Helen,  319,  .336 

—  Helen  Jane  (Ritchie),  45 

—  Helen  M.  (Riley),  359 

—  Helen  Marr  (Beaumont),  377 

—  Helen  Maud.  427 


INDEX. 


Hubbard.  Helen  Pallister,  334 

—  Helen  Prescott,  362 

—  Heinan,   420 

—  Henry,    99,  100,  101,  12*,  195,  2o8 

319,   325,  332,   354,  355,  356,  359, 
373,  426,  428,  430 

—  Henry  A.,  99.  176 

—  Henry  B.,  176 

—  Henry  Babcock,  101 

—  Henry  Blatchford,  101,  336 

—  Henry  C„  98 

—  Henry  Clay,  440 

—  Henry  E.,  176 

—  Henry  Earl,  427 

—  Henry  Eugene,  356 

—  Henry  F.,  354 

—  Henry  G.,  404 

—  Henry  Griswold,  326 

—  Henry  Guernsey,  101,  314,  384 

—  Henry  H..  176,  430 

—  H.-nry  M.,  336 

—  Henry  Mascurene,  404 

—  Henry  Randolph,  366 

—  Henry  Scott.  319,  355 

—  Henry  Seward.  353 

—  Herbert  Newell,  370 

—  Herod,  135 

—  Hester,  430 

—  Hester  Ann,  318,  427 

—  Hezekiah,  129,  135 

—  Hiram,  426 

—  Hiram  Bosworth,  332 

—  Hiram  V.,  176 

—  Homer,  344 

—  Hooker,  135 

—  Hopson  M..  98 

—  Horace,  176.  378,  379,  430 

—  Horace  Edward,  42") 

—  Horace  R.,  426 

—  Howard,  350 

—  Howard  Fruin,  99 

—  Hugh,  47 

—  Humphrey,  135 

—  I.  G..  99 

—  Ichabod,  50 

—  Ida  J_>.  (Squires),  356 

—  Ida  M.  (Haigh),  384 

—  Idella  (Holt),  373 

—  Inez  Elizabeth,  332 

—  Isaac,   135,   136,  164,  244,  247,  248, 

390.  403 

—  Isaac  Gardiner.  403 

—  Isaac  George,  99 

—  Isaac  P.,  421 

—  Isaac  Penny,  493 

—  Isaac  Watts,  370,  371 

—  Isabel,  197,  426 

—  Israel,  136 

—  Ithamore,  427 

—  J.  Augustus,  332 

—  J.  F.,  421 

—  J.  G.,  267,  428 

—  J.  H.,  421 

—  J.  Harry,  349 

—  Jabez,  326 

—  Jabez  B.,  100 

—  Jackson  A..  430 

—  Jacob.  98,  124,  126,  136,  247,  248, 

3 JO.  388 

—  Jacobus.  124,  207.  243,  366 

—  James.  37,  38.    48,  49.    57,   59,  124, 

126,  129,  134.  136,  165,  176.  243, 
332,  376,  389.  403,  414,  426,  429, 
435.  437,  439.  440 

—  James,   of  Gravesend,  L.    I.,   De- 

scendants of,  63.  {.See  Special 
Index) 

—  James  A.,  179 

—  James  Anthony,  317 

—  James  F.,  430         ' 

—  James  Frank.  429 

—  James  H.,  179 

—  James  Henry,  348 


46l 


Hubbard,  James  M.,  100,  179 

—  James  Mascerene,  336 

—  James  P.,  414 

—  James  R..  427 

—  James  Robinson,  436 

—  James  T.,  98,  179 

—  James  V.,  179 

—  James  W.,  179 

—  Jane,  47.  59,  332.  426,  436 

—  Jane  Amelia,  428 

—  Jane  (Anderson),  374 

—  Jane  (Davis),  426 

—  Jane  (Ely).  47 

—  Jane  Elizabeth.  386 

—  Jane  Elizabeth  (Davis).  386 

—  Jane  Elizabeth  (Woodruff),  359 

—  Jane  (Latham),  47 

—  Jane  (Miles),  322 

—  Jane  (Vodin),  414 

—  Japheth.  136 

—  .tared,  430 

—  Jedediah,  129 

—  Jedimah,  136 

—  Jedimir,  136 

—  Jennie,  438 

—  Jennie  C.  (Whitcomb),  427 

—  Jennie  Doane  (Galpin),  197 

—  Jennie  Loraine,  370 

—  Jennison  J.,  354 

—  Jenny,  197 

—  Jeremiah,   125,   129,  137,  322,  357, 

388 

—  Jerry  W.,  43C 

—  Jerusha.  427 

—  Jesse,  347.  348,  427 

—  Jesse  H..  179 

—  Jessee,  124 

—  Jessie  A.  (Wallace),  197 

—  Jo,  137,  390 

—  Joab.  129 

—  Joanna  (Perkins),  334,  335 

—  Job,  129 

—  Joel,  129,  137.  317 

—  Joel  Douglas,  317 

—  John.  35.  37,  44,  49,  56,  57.  58,  59. 

97.  98,  99,  100,  101,  123.  124.  125, 
126,  129.  137.  138,  104.  165,  179, 
180.  244,  315.  318,  319,  324.  332, 
347,  363.  372,  373.  389.  390,  391, 
392,394.  309.  403.  408.  414.  415, 
42s.  430,  435.  430.  440 

—  John  &  Co.,  44.  45 

—  John  B.,  170,  403 

—  John  Barrett.  99,  318 

—  John  Bartlett,  245 

—  John   Brace,  364 

—  John  ('.,  179.  428 

—  John  Cleaveland,  386 

—  John  Coleman.  361 

—  John  Douelas.  44o 

—  John  E.,  404 

—  John  Edward,  348.  349 

—  John  Erastus,  360,  441 

—  John  Havel,  9s 

—  John  Frank,  378,  379 

—  John  Gellibrand.  17.  44,  45 

—  John  Gordon,  324,  356 

—  John  H.,  179,  389 

—  John  Henry,  330,  3-5 

—  John  James.  328 

—  John  Josiah,  356 

—  John  M..  100 

—  John  Merwin,  363 

—  John  N.,  loO 

—  John  P.,  100 

—  John  Peck,  363.  364 

—  John  T..  100,  179.  403 

—  John  Tabor.  344 

—  John  Theodore.  386 

—  John  Tibbetts.  377 

—  John  Tomlinson,  332 

—  John  V.,  395 

—  John  W.,  99,  179 


462 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND    GENEALOGY 


Hubbard,  John  and  Mary  (Men-jam), 
Descendants  vt,  213.  (See  Special 
I, ides.) 

—  John,  of  Pomfret,  Conn.,  Descend- 

ants of.  7-1.    (See  Special  hid  x) 

—  Jonah,  138 

—  Jonas,  127,  129,   139,   312,  422  423 

424.  4-25 

—  Jonathan,    100.   124,  125,  127,  129 

139,  244,  20*.  885 

—  Jonathan  B.,  9.s,  367 

—  Jonathan  H..  99 

—  Jonathan  H  itch.  315 

—  Jonathan  Hunt,  373 

—  Jorge.  129  « 

—  Joseph.   50.   57,   60.   12G,  127,  130, 

139,    140,  164,  21-.',  870,  377,  387, 
388.  39U.  414.  415.  429,  430 

—  Joseph  A..  179,429 

—  Joseph  Augustus.  332 

—  Joseph  C  .  100 

—  Joseph  Croofoot,  98 

—  Joseph  D.,  98 

—  Joseph  Lorens,  57 

—  Joseph  Philip,  393 

—  Joseph  S.,  100 

—  Joseph  Stillman.  311 

—  Joseph  Wanen,  380 

—  Joseph  Welton,  101 

—  Josephine.  324,  429 

—  Josephine  Mason  (Watson),  34S,  349 

—  Josh,  140 

—  Joshua,  126.  130,  319.  414,  415 

—  Joshua  Roberts,  376,  377 

—  Josiah.  130.  140.  324,  356,  379,  426 

—  Josiah  Clark.  98 

—  Josiah  E.,  376 

—  Josiah  Gordon,  356 

—  Josiah  Humphrey,  371 

—  Josiah  M.,  179 

—  Josiah  Meigs,  263,  379 

—  Judd  Imer,  136,  140 

—  Judiah,  430 

—  Judith,  57 

—  Judith  Bay,  57 

—  Judson,  N".  B.,  430 

—  Julia,  401,  430 

—  Julia  Alice,  334 

—  Julia  D.,  421 

—  Julia  K.,  349 

—  Julia  Electa,  359 

—  Julia  P.,  197 

—  Julia  H..  197 

—  Julia  J.,  4311 

—  Julia  Lam  bard,  368 

—  Julia  .\I.,  438 

—  Julia  Mary,  327 

—  Julia  Payne,  334 

—  Juliet   344 

—  Julius  C,  179 

—  J 11  ius  w.,  mo 

—  Kate.  43t; 

—  Kate  (Lazier),  3S4 

—  Kate  (Turner),  348 

—  Katherine.  335,  361 

—  Katherine  (Beckwith)  Knight,  362 

—  Katherine  Eggleston.  356 

—  Kathiebelle  May,  364 

—  Kenneth  Davenport,  324 

—  Keto,  140 

—  L.  F.,  4114 

—  L.  P.,  404 

—  Laura,  4"3 

—  Laura  Booth  (Davis),  363 

—  Laura  (Catlin),  312 

—  Laura  E.  (Combs),  385 

—  Laura  Garland,  366 

—  Laura  M„  373 

—  Laura  Pauline,  317 

—  Lavina,  427 

—  Lavina  M..  428 

—  Lavinia.  4:'0 

—  Lavinia  (Bacon)  Coe,  380 


Hubbard,  Lawrence  Ervin,  302 

—  Lazarus,  140,  414,  415 

—  Lemuel,  127,  325,  348,  349 

—  Leonidas,  344 

—  Leonora  (Turner).  366 

—  Lerna  L.  (Thompson),  376 

—  Leroy  W.,  101 

—  Leroy  Watkins,  99 

—  Lester,  430 

—  Lester  C,  179 

—  Lester  Samuel.  99 

—  Leverett,  100,  Ml 

—  Leverett  Marsden,  323,  324,  427 

—  Levi,  140.  312,  423,  430 
'  —  Lewis,  881 

—  Lewis  Clark.  364 

—  Lewis  Kelley,  101 

—  Lillian,  428 

—  Lillian  Anna,  332 

—  Lizzie,  404 

—  Lizzie  E..  404 

—  Llda  Wilson,  334 

—  Lois,  426 

—  Lois  (Corey),  370,  371 

—  Lois  (White),  386 

—  Loretta  (  -?)  Watson,  195 

—  Louis  D.,  179 

—  Louis  Dexter,  355 

—  Louis  V.,  lol 

—  Louisa  (Brooks),  376 

—  Louisa  Dexter  (West),  355 

—  Louisa  (West),  319 

—  Louise  Pallister,  334 

—  Lucetta  Mildrum  (Wilcox).  97,  357 

—  Lucilla  A.  (Gibbs).  376 

—  Lucius,  100,  143,  368,  385 

—  Lucius  Alanson.  98 

—  Lucius  P.,  179 

—  Lucius  Frederick,  267,  327 

—  Lucius  Lambard.  368 

—  Lucius  Lee,  98,  101,  367,  368 

—  Lucius  M.,  179 

—  Lucius  Virgil,  101 

—  Lucius  Virgilius,  327,  367,  368 

—  Lucretia,  244 

—  Lucretia  (Gates),  356 

—  Lucretia  (Gill  I,  415 

—  Lucv.  244,  344,  360,  389,  415.  422 

427,  438 

—  Lucy  A.  (McClintock),  430 

—  Lucy  Bancroft,  324 

—  Lucy  (Gray)  Lee,  319 

—  Lucy  L..  404 

—  Lucy  Lyman.  379,  380 

—  Lucy  Lyman  (Hubbard),  379,  3S0 

—  Lucy  Lyman  (Hubbard)  Hubbard. 

380 

—  Lucy  M. ,  98 

—  Lucy-Marian,  44 

—  Lucy  Mary,  344 

—  Lucy  McDonough.  326 

—  Lucy  (Peabody).  415 

—  Lucy  (Starr),  341.  344 

—  Lucy  (Wheeler),  438 

—  Ludah  (Vestal ).  385 

—  Lumaii  Farnsworth,  376 

—  Luther,  385,  386 

—  Luther  Prescott,  385,  386 

—  Lntherick,  143 

—  Lydia,  47 

—  Lydia  (Mather),  326 

—  Lyle,  438 

—  Lyman,  438 

—  Lyman  J.,  376 

—  M.  D.,  404 

—  M.  Louise,  404 

—  Mabel  Gardiner,  341 

■  Mabel  L.  (Potter),  429 
Mabelle,  317 
Mandane  (Van  Deusfen),  332 

—  Manuel.  197 
Marcellus,  197 

Marcia  (Putnam),  37S,  379  ' 


Hubbard,  Margaret,  47.  165,  390,  403 
414.  420,  440 

—  Margaret  (Allen).  47 

—  Margaret  (  Day),  430 

—  Margaret  (Naunton),  37,  38 

—  Margaret  Sill.  326 

—  .Margaret  True-dell,  386 

—  Margaret  (Van  Vaikenburg),  327 

—  Margei  et,  384 

—  Marguerite.  :.62 

—  Maria,  315.  429 

—  Maria  L.,  98 

—  Maria  Louise  (Clancy),  358 

—  Maria  Margaret  (Napier),  44 

—  Marian,  341 

—  Marianna  (Morgan),  44 

—  Marie,  391 

—  Marie  Louise,  320 

—  Marie  Lucretia,  324 

—  Mariette  (— f),  385 

—  Marilla.  427 

—  Marinda  (Olin).  438 

—  Marshall  E„  427 

—  Martha,  9.N.  203,  426 

—  Martha  (Adams),  415 

—  Martha  Devere,  438 

—  Martha  Henshaw  (Bates),  314 

—  Martha  Hunt.  373 

—  Martha  J.  (Peck),  429 

—  Martha  (Kimball),  324 

—  Martha  Louise.  379,  880 

—  Martha  ().  (Davis),  3*5 

—  Martha  (Smith),  101.  428 

—  Marthn  Weare,  336 

—  Martin.  429 

—  Mary.  47.  49.  53,  56.59,  212  244, 

247,  248,   263.  32o,  348,   377,  384, 
390.  414.  415,  427,  428,  43* 

—  Mary  (— ?),  393,414 

—  Mary  A..  429 

—  Mary  (Allen).  390 

—  Mary  Ann,  324,  3-30,  386 

—  Maiy  Ann  (Greene),  336 

—  Mary  Ann  (Hubbard),  33" 

—  Mary  Ann  Pitkin,  314 

—  Mary  Anna,  379,  380 

—  Mary  Anne,  335 

—  Mary  Anne  (Coit)  Blatchford,  335 

—  Mary  Anne  (Greene),  335 

—  Mary  Amelia,  317 

—  Mary  (Ball),  324 

—  Mary  Burton,  391 

—  Mary  (Butler),  415,  426 

—  Mary  C.  (Emerson),  436 

—  Mary  (—  J)  t'oas,  59 

—  Mary  Cumniings  (Tenney),  3*5,  3*6 

—  Mary  (Curtis),  49 

—  Mary  E.  (Warren)  McLellan,  100 

—  Mary  Elizabeth.  320,  364,  377 

—  Mary  Elizabeth  (Fitch),  lOlt 

—  Mary  Ellen,  366 

—  Mary  F.  (Gentry),  385 

—  Mary  (Fairbanks),  414 

—  Mary  (Fay),  373 

—  Mary  (Harrow),  415 

—  Mary  (Hathaway),  438 

—  Mary  (  Hobby),  56 

—  Mary  Hurst  (Gladding).  353 

—  Mary  I..  427 

—  Mary  J.,  371 

—  Mary  (Kennedy),  324 

—  Mary  L.,  426 

—  Mary  Linsley.  245,  395 

—  Mary  Lucinda,  348 

—  Mary  (  Lyons),  60 

—  Mary  M.,  403 

—  Mary  (Mangum).  385 

—  Mary  McFall,  374 

—  Mary  (Mnflfatt).  426 

—  Mary  (Morgan).  325 
-Mary  P.  (Minis),  385 

—  Mary  (Peacock  >.  368 

—  Mary  Peacock,  36S 


INDEX. 


46. 


Hubbard,  Marv  Piatt-  l  Read),  365,  439 

—  Marj  (Porter  .  812 

—  Marv  Boss  (Gilbert),  354 

—  Mary  (Rumbold),  348,  349 

—  Mary  S.,  430 

—  Mary  Sejar  (Cronk),  355 

—  Mary  Shaw.  -Ho 

—  Marv  Smith.  314 

—  Mary  (Stevens),  312,  422 

—  Marv  T  .  98 

—  Mary  Teuney,  3S6 

—  Mary  (Thomas),  435 

—  Mary  (Tibbetts).  376,  377 

—  Marv  (Tuthill),  56 

—  Mary  (Warner).  4!».  429 

—  Mary  (Wilber),  430 

—  Mary  Williams  (Stone),  371 

—  Mary  Wintbrop,  335 

—  Mary  Woodruff,  359 

—  Marvaima  (Stearns),  355 

—  Mathew,  105.  247 

—  Matilda,  4U3,  428 

—  Matthew,  248 

—  Matthew  Patton,  34S 

—  May,  165 

—  May  (Soden).  43S 

—  May  Winifred,  353 

—  Mehitable  ( Miller),  212 

—  Mehitable   Zipporah     (Whitmore), 

324,  356 

—  Mel.  143 

—  Melville.  428 

—  Menoab,  130 

—  Mercy,  244 

—  Mercy  (Brooks),  374 

—  Mercy  (Burrell),  414 

—  Mercv  (Lewis),  430 

—  Merrill  Field,  370 

—  Metta  Frances,  377 

—  Micah,  314 

—  Michael.  393 

—  MileB,  126,  143.  414,415 

—  Minnie,  42>.  44u 

—  Minnie  Vara,  364 

—  Miranda,  426 

—  Miriam,  320 

—  Miriam  Warren,  349 

—  Mollie  (Parks).  348 

—  Moses,  HIO,  101,  130,  143,  390 

—  Mother,  416 

—  Mvra  Trvon,  320 

—  Myron,  428 

—  Myron  R„  1U0.  428 

—  Myron  V..  179 

—  Nancy,  32S,  373 

—  Nannie  O..  403 

—  Naomi,  +55 

—  Naomi  C.  421 

—  Naomi  (Cocke),  49.  50,  53,  54 

—  Nat,  143 

—  Nathalie  Dean.  355 

—  Nathan,  143.  179,  427 

—  Nathan  D.,  179 

—  Nathaniel,   luO.  101,   144.164,247, 

248.  3»l,  398,  430 

—  Nathaniel  Dean.  101,  319 

—  Nathaniel  H.,  179 

—  Nathaniel  M..  179 

—  Nathaniel  Meade,  98 

—  Nathaniel  N..  179 

—  Nathaniel  Newell,  380 

—  Nehemiah,    130,  144,  247,  267,  341, 

343,  344.  390,  404 

—  Nela  Louisa,  364 

—  Nelia  F.,  403 

—  Nellie,  325 

—  Nellie  Louise.  364 

—  Nellie  Louise  (Feet),  364 

—  Nellie  M.,  438 

—  Nelson  Chamberlin.  99,  334 

—  Nelson  Eugene,  439 

—  Nettie  D.,  438 

—  Nettie  ( Parks),  348 


Hubbard's    Newspaper  and  Bank  Di- 
rectory of  the  World,  405 
Hubbard,  Newton,  34b 

—  Nicholas.  144 

—  Nicia,  347 

—  Noadiah,  144 

—  Noah,  144 

—  Norman,  373,  374 

—  Norman  Souires,  364 

—  Norris  S..  438 

—  Null  G„  440 

—  O.  M.,  404 

—  Obediah,  124 

—  Ochre,  42S 

—  Ochus  Graves,  M0,  101 

—  Olive,  430 

—  Olive  Bell,  440 

—  Olive  (Wilson),  318 

—  Oliver,  99,  130,  144.  426,  427 

—  Oliver  P.,   10U 

—  Oliver  Payson,  H9 

—  Olivia  Ferrier  (Beattie),  379 

—  Ophelia,  344 

—  Orlando,  344 

—  Orlo,  427 

—  Orrin,  426 

—  Orrin  C,  404 

—  Otis,  430 

—  Parley,  330 

—  Patty,  415 

—  Patty  (Randall),  426 

—  Paul,  127.   145 

—  Paul  Mascerene,  336 

—  Pearl,  438 

—  Peggy  (Allen),  379 

—  Perry  L.,  179 

—  Peter,  126,  145,  347.  393.  415 

—  Phebe,  248,  263,  314,  383,  427 

—  Phebe  Ann,  430 

—  Phebe  iDyei),  430 

—  Phebe  (Hubbard),  314,  3S3 

—  Phebe  (Johnson),  43IJ 

—  Philander  W..  179 

—  Philena,  428.  43<> 

—  Philip,  58,  59, 130.  145.  .'45.  268 

—  Philip,  of    Kittery,  Me.,  Descend- 

ants of,  102.    (x«e  Special  Index) 

—  Philip  P.,  1O0 

—  Philip  Parley,  332 

—  Phineas.  145.  421 

—  Phinehas.  145 

—  Pierre.  127 

—  Places,  267 

—  Polly  (Cone).  344 

—  Polly  (Dean),  3*2 

—  Prime,  126 

—  Prince,  126 

—  Prudence,  58 

—  Prudence  (Stevens),  319 

—  R.  I)  ,  4(4 

—  R.  M.,  404 

—  R.  Schuyler,  438 

—  Rachel,  53,  55,  59,  391,  415 

—  Rachel  (Low),  414 

—  Rachel  (Payn).  414 

—  Rachell  (— ?),  391 

—  Ransom,  385 

—  Ray,  332 

—  Raymond  Egerton.  45 

—  Rebecca,  263,  347.  414 

—  Rebecca  (— ?),  385,  414 

—  Rebecca  Curtis.  197 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  100 

—  Rebecca  (Penny),  403 

—  Rebecca  (Preston).  324 

—  Rebecca  Preston,  324 

—  Rebecca  (  Swart),  243 

—  Reuben.  60,  126,  130,  145,  422 

—  Rev.    William  and   Mary  (Rogers), 

Descendants  of,  181.   (See  Special 
tildes) 

—  Rhoda,  387,  388 

—  Rhoda  (Hastings).  318 


Hubbard,  Richard,  35,  53.  58,  59,  60, 
190,  101,  124,    127,    145,   26s,  319, 

344,  347,  401.  414,  436 

—  Richard,  of   Salisbury,    Mass.,  De- 

scendants of.  bo.  (See  Special  In- 
dex) 

—  Richard  Bennet,  100.  101,  267,  312 

—  Richard  1).,  M0 

—  Richard  Dudley,  99.  325 

—  Richard  Dunning,  373,  374 

—  Richard  \\\,  loo 

—  Richard  William,  311,  344 

—  Robert,   47,  98,   lOu,   ISO,  379,  380, 

384,  429 

—  Robert  Arnold,  379 

—  Robert  Frederick,  383 

—  Robert  G.,  ISO 

—  Robert  J„  404 

—  Robert  James,  314,  383 

—  Robert  McCurdv,  341 

—  Robert  Morris,  -:54,  378.  379 

—  Robert  W.,  ISO 

—  Roberta  Wolcott,  336.  341 

—  Rodolphns  Baker,  100 

—  Roger,  360,  441 

—  Robin  0„  180 

—  Romeo,  344 

—  Rosa  Leigh  (Lumi,  365 

—  Ros:anna  W.  (Butler),  12> 

—  Rose,  42S 

—  Rose-Ellen.  45 

—  Roswell,  127.  130.  146.  244,  314,  375 

—  Rowena  A.  (Tuttle),  376 

—  Royal  S..  180 

—  Rubin,  126 

—  Rufus  Peabody,  101 

—  Ruggles.  100 

—  Russell,  100,  146 

—  Ruth.  55.  97,  427 

—  Ruth  (—;-),  414 

—  Ruth  Isabel.  865 

—  Ruth  (Reed),  427 

—  Ruth  (Warriner).  414 

—  S.  D..  404 

—  S.  Anna  (Brown).  332 

—  S.  Maria  (Hosmer)  Hawkes,  439 

—  Sally,  317.  423 

—  Sally  (Peck)   363 

—  Sallv  Walker  (Dean),  319.  355 

—  Samuel.  49.  50,  53.  54.  55,  57.  100. 

101,  126,  13U,  146.  147,  IN'.  334, 
335,  336,  372,  373.  391,  414,  42!', 
430,  438.  439 

—  Samuel  Birrisey,  320 

—  Samuel  Hrigham,  361 

—  Samuel  D.,  100.  1>0 

—  Samuel  Dana,  99 

—  Samuel  Dickinson,  244,  26S,  320 

—  Samuel  Hildreth,  355 

—  Samuel  McK.,  99 

—  Samuel  M..  180 

—  Samuel  Tabor,  344 

—  Samuel  William.  353 

—  Samuel  Wilson.  375 

—  Samuel  Wolcott.  324 

—  Samuel  Woodward,  361,  362 

—  Sanford  B..  404 

—  Sara  (— ?),  414 

—  Sarah,   53,  54.  57.  59,  244,  248.  344, 

345.  371,  377,  384,  390,  415,  426. 
429 

—  Sarah  A.  (Lyon),  3«7 

—  Sarah  Ann  (Clark),  363 

—  Sarah  Ann  (Townsend),  370,  371 

—  Sarah  Ann  (Trvon),  320 

—  Sarah  B.  (Ross).  354 

—  Sarah  ( Bacon),  47 

—  Sarah  (Baughman),  384 

—  Sarah  (Brown),  59 

—  Sarah  (Clapp).  319 

—  Sarah  (Cull),  373 

—  Sarah  Dean.  319 

—  Sarah  Delano,  354 


464 


HUBBARD   HISTORY  AND    GENEALOGY 


Hubbard,  Sarah  E.  L.  (Handy),  311 

—  Sarah  E.  (Uowe),  354 

—  Sarah  E.  (White),  43U 

—  Sarah  Elizabeth,  375.  366 

—  Sarah  Elizabeth  (Prescott),  362 

—  Sarah  Elmer,  348 

—  Sarah  Hill  (Tomlinson).  336 

—  Sarah  Hodge  (Barrett),  315,  31S 

—  Sarah  (Humphrey*  ).  344 

—  Sarah  Isabelle  (Sylvester),  357 

—  Sarah  Jane,  362 

—  Sarah  (Johnson).  247 

—  Sarah  Kaskey.  361 

—  Sarah  (Kingman).  56 

—  Sarah  Lavenia  (Wiley),  340,  350 

—  Sarah  (Low),  57 

—  Sarah  Maria  (Holmes),  361,  362 

—  Sarah  (Mitchell),  314 

—  Sarah  Ogden  (Johnson),  385 

—  Sarah  Pallister,  334 

—  Sarah  (Pallister),  334 

—  Sarah  R.  (Lyman),  101 

—  Sarah  (Russell).  .7.1 

—  Sarah  (Sill).  248,  263,  341,  379,  380 

—  Sarah  (Tibbetts),  376 

—  Sarah  Wheeler  (Hewett),  428 

—  Sarah  (Winshipl.  53 

—  Sarah  Wiener,  335 

—  Selah,  125,  130,  147 

—  Senia  Etta,  385 

—  Serena,  430 

—  Serena  (Tucker),  330 

—  Seth,  147,  430 

—  Seymour,  426 

—  Sheldon,  428 

—  Sherman  H.,  100 

—  Sibyl  Amelia  ( Fahnestock),  315 

—  Sibyl  Emma,  315 

—  Silas,  147,  385 

—  Silas  Graves.  318 

—  Silas  P..  180 

—  Silence  (Twingl,  415 

—  Simeon,  100,  312 

—  Simeon  Pease,  36S,  370 

—  Simon,  438 

—  Simon  Ray,  57 

—  Simon  S.,  438 

—  Socrates,  97,  180 

—  Solomon,  347,  436 

—  Solon,  99 

—  Sophia,  197 

—  Sophia  Libby  (Hurd).  377 

—  Sophia  (Whitney),  195 

—  Sophia  (Wilson),  375 

—  Sophie  (Hunt),  335 

—  Sophie  Todd.  429 

—  Southwick,  124.  148 

—  Stella  Laura.  363 

—  Stella  (Moore).  334 

—  Stella  Russell,  334 

—  Stephen,  148.  180,  426 

—  Stephen  G.,  100 

—  Stephen  W.,  100 

—  Sterling  Beckwith,  362 

—  Steven  G  .  99 

—  Stewart.  180 

—  Stuart,  99 

—  Susan,  430 

—  Susan  Campbell  (Weare),  336 

—  Susan  (Cone  1,  426 

—  Susan  Maria  (Peck),  353 

—  Susanna,  57,  388 

—  Susanna  ( — '■).  414 

—  Susannah,  57,  58,  415 

—  Susie,  436 

—  Sylvanus,  414 

—  T.  Mav,  349 

—  T.  S.,  4114 

—  T.  W.,  404 

—  Tabitha  (Bowden),  59 

—  Tabitha  (Champney)  Hancock,  389 

—  Taoy  (Cooper),  54 

—  Tenes,  130 


Hubbard,  Tessa,  430 

—  Thankful  (Hatch),  315 

—  Theodore,  317,  357 

—  Theodore  Frelinghuysen,  3-6 

—  Theodore  Worthinglon,  357 

—  Therase,  414 

—  Theron  T.,  180 

—  Thomas.  31,  35,  37.  38.  48,  49.  50,  53, 

54,  55,  56,  57,  9\  100,  101,  124. 
127,  131.  148,  20s,  311,  319,  344, 
361,  386,  390,  301,  393,  403,  426. 
4-i9,  440 

—  Thomas  A..  IK) 

—  Thomas  G,  373 

—  Thomas  Deering,  314 

—  Thomas  G.,  100 

—  Thomas  George,  3*5 

—  Thomas  Gray,  319 

—  Thomas  H.,  100,  180.  421 

—  Thomas  Hamlin,  99.  315,  318 

—  Thomas  Hill,  314,  328,  3*3,  384 

—  Thomas  Holt,  373 

—  Thomas  R.,  100 

—  Thomas  Robinson,  344 

—  Thomas  Ross.  349 

—  Thomas  Rowland,  320 

—  Thomas  Rumbold,  348,  349,  350 

—  Thomas  Russell,  386 

—  Thomas  S.,  100 

—  Thomas  Scranton,  359 

—  Thomas  Swan,  372.  373 

—  Timothy,  130,  131,  148,  ISO 

—  Timothy  Fay,  373 

—  Timothv  H.,  180 

—  Titus.  131 

—  Tuthill,  57 

—  Tuttle,  57 

—  Ursula  Pomeroy  (Graves),  361 

—  Van  Buren,  100,  180 

—  Vara  L.  (Smith),  364 

—  Vashti,  426 

—  Vernon  R. ,  403 

—  Vincent,  440 

—  Vinson,  440 

—  Vinton.  438 

—  Virgil.  344 

—  Virginia  Hamlin,  318 

—  W.  B.,  404 

—  W.  F.,  404 

—  W.  H.,  404 

—  W.  P.,  404 

—  Waitawhile  (Cobbet),  414 

—  Waldo,  319 

—  Walt.-r.  38,  322.  385,  421 

—  Walter  D.,  180 

—  Walter  Jones,  3*4 

—  Walter  Norris,  197 

—  Walter  Quintus,  317 

—  Walter  W.,  427 

—  Warren  C,  404 

—  Warren  Calhoun,  373,  374 

—  Warwick,  14* 

—  Wates,  125 

—  Watts,  125,  370,  371 

—  Wilbur  Watson,  34S,  349,  350 

—  William,  37,  38,  40,  48.  57,  100,  101, 

125,  131,  148,  164,  165,  180,  195. 
245,  312,  31!),  325,  334,  835,  361, 
3*6.  39o,  391,  403,  414,  426,  42S, 
438 

—  Rev.  William,  of    Ipswich,   Mass., 

Descendants  of,  167.  (See  Special 
Index) 

—  William   and   Abigail   Dudley,  De- 

scendants of,  264.  {See  Special 
Index) 

—  William  A.,  180 

—  William  Arthur,  356 

—  William  B.,  100,  385,  408 

—  William  Babcock,  335 

—  William  Beek,  377 

—  William  Burr,  383 


Hubbard.  William  C,  98,  180,  429 

—  William  Coit,  336 

—  William  E..  ISO 

—  William  Eugene,  364 

—  William  P.,  99.  100.  1-0 

—  William  Francis.  99 

—  William  G..  100.  42] 

—  William  Gilmer.  399 

—  William  Guptill,  101 

—  William  H..  9*.  1*0.  267.  430    " 

—  Wilbam  Hammond,  101,  336 

—  William   Henry.   98,  101.  207,  328, 

365,  366,  371),  371.  385.  403 

—  William  Holden,  376 

—  William  Hustace,  99 

—  William  J.,  100 

—  William  Leffingwell,  344 

—  William  Lemuel,  348,  349,  350 

—  William  M.,  373 

—  William  Newton.  427 

—  William  Norris.  9*.  99,  386 

—  William  P.,  180,  317 

—  William  Pallister,  99,  334 

—  William  Pesoa,  403 

—  William  Russell,  364 

—  William  S.,  180 

—  William  Stimpson,  99 

—  William  Swan.  373 

—  William  T.,  403 

—  William  Thompson,  317 

—  William  W..  1-0 

—  William  Wingate,  99 

—  Willie  Prescott.  386 

—  Wilmott.  5is,  59 

—  Winifred  Mary.  45 

—  Winifred  May,  364 

—  Woodson,  3<*S 

—  Wright,  348 

—  Wyllys  Woodruff,  359 

—  Zadock,  148 

—  Zebdial  Potter,  348 

—  Zebulon,  131 

—  Zechariah,  56,  57 

—  Zer.as,  131 

—  Zuilee.  427 

—  Zurriah,  422 
Hubbardt,  James,  435 
Hubbart,  Edward,  390 

—  Joseph  Snow,  101 
Hubbartt,  James.  435 
Hubbell,  Walter,  25 
Hubbert,  of  Cork,  35 

—  Richard,  60 

—  Sarah  (— ?)  Thrasher,  60 
Hubbv,  David,  126,  131 

—  Henry,  131 

—  James,  131 

—  John,  126 

—  Jonathan,  126 

—  Mills,  131 

Hubert,  of  Burge.  Kent,  35 

—  of  Sunbury,  Middlesex.  35 

—  Hannah  (Ives),  53 

—  James,  53 

"Hulberd"  Hubbards,  71.  {Set  Specia\ 

Index) 
Huling.  Ray  Greene,  54 
Hull,  Robert.  50 
Humorous  Skit,  416 
Humphreys,  Maria  (— ?),  344 

—  William,  344 
Hunt.  John,  375 

—  Sarah  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  375 
Huntley,  Charles,  Esq.,  45 
Hurd,  Tamson  (— ?),  377 

—  William,  377 
Hutchinson,  Ann,  50 
Hyde,  John  McE..  335 
Imported  Hubbards,  403 
Incomplete  Descent  Lines,  444 
Insley,  Julia  Electa  (Hubbard),  359 

—  Thomas  A.,  359 
Ives,  Miles.  53 


IXDEX. 


465 


Ives,  Wooster,  304 
Jackson,  John.  53 

—  Robert,  *53 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  53 
James  I.,  King,  39.  4(1 
Johnson,  Albert,  *430 

—  Alfred.  *430 

—  Casper.  *438 

—  0.  J..  438 

—  Elijah,  *430 

—  Elisha,  430 

—  Elvira  S.  (Hubbard),  438 

—  Horace.  *430 

—  Irene.  *430 

—  Isaac.  56 

—  Jared,  430 

—  Jonathan  W.,  386 

—  Jordan.  *430 

—  Julia.  *43U 

—  Lavinia.  *430 

—  Lula,  "43s 

—  Marv  (Hubbard).  428 

—  Mary  Ann  I  Woodruff),  386 

—  Norman,  *480 

—  Olive.   *43U 

—  Olive  (Hubbard).  4-10 

—  Samuel,  *43U 

—  Serena  1  Hubbard).  430 
Judd.  Hannah  (Hubbard),  391 

—  Jonathan.  391 

Keightley.  Thomas  (Historians  18 
Kellogg,  Fannie  M.  (Hubbard),  441 
Kelly.  Julia  Payne  (Hubbard).  334 

—  Wilson  Irwin.  334 
Kennedy,  George,  317 

—  Mary"  A.  Shankley,  317 
Kent,  John.  04:-; 
Kilbourne,  Elizabeth,  044 

—  Jonathan.  244 
Kimball,  Daniel,  59 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard  ,  59 
Knr.pp,  Bethia  (brandish),  *53 

—  Timothy,  53 

Knight.  Anna  (Elliott),  384 
_  i  leorge.  384 

—  Walter  Oliphant.  302 
Lnng.vorthy.  Andrew.  55 

—  James.  *55 

—  Rachel  (Hubbard),  55 

—  Samuel,  *55 

Lansing,  Cornelia  (  Hubbard).  429 

—  Maria  (Hubbard;,  429 

—  Robert,  429 
Latham,  Cary.  47 

—  Elizabeth  (Masters)  Lockwood,   47 
Lawrence,  Anna  Louisa,  *364 

—  Charles  R..  364 

—  George  Hubbard.  *364 

—  Marv  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  364 

—  Willi  1111,  *304 
Lazier.  Frederick  L..  384 

—  Martha  (Garrison  1.  384 
Leach,  Deborah  (—:).  427 

Leverett  W.,  V±~ 

—  Leverett  Woodbridge,  324 
Len\  enworth,  E.  A.,  44  ) 

—  Florence  May  |  Huobard),  440 
Leete,  Governor,  .">5 

Lr  Neve,  Oliver,  40 
Lewis.  John.  415 

—  Marv  (Hubbard).  415 
Lindley,  Austin  M.,  35!) 

—  Marv  Woodruff  (Hubbard).  359 
Lingard,  John  (Historian),  18 
Linton.  Gordon  Saltonstall  Hubbard, 

330 
Litchfield,  Edwin  C,  314 

—  E.  Darwin.  314 

—  (irace  Hill  (Hubbard),  314 

-   Mary  Smith  1  Hubbard),  314 
Lockwood.  Edmund,  47 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  376 

—  Hoyt  Benjamin,  376 


Logan.  Catherine  (Hubbard),  372 
-  Linus.  372 

Long  island  Hubbards.  63 
Loomis,  Julia  M.  (Hubbard),  438 

—  Lula,  *43S 

—  Maud.  *43S 

—  Neihe.  *438 

—  Samuel.  43S 

—  William.  *43S 
Lord  Addiugton,  17,  44,  45 

—  Auckland.  40 
Love  letter.  413 
Lowder,  Marv  (Hubbard),  415 

—  William.  415 
Ludlow,  Roger,  54 
Lyman,  Alonzo.  101 
Lypert.  John.  37 
MacKenzie,   Alexander,  440 

—  Blanch  Elizabeih  (Hubbard),  440 
Major  Gen.  Churchill,  -il 
Mansfield,  Alfred,  362 

—  George  Rogers,  *362 

—  Harvey.  *362 

—  Samuel  Huobard,  *362 

—  Sarah  Jane  (Hubbard),  302 
Mapes,  Asa.  409 

—  Cecelia  Ann.  *429 

—  Elizabeth  Cornelia,  *429 

—  Harriet  (  Hubbard;.  429 

—  Harriet  Sophia.  *429 

—  John  Palmer.  *  129 

—  Jonathan,  429 

—  Thomas,  429 

—  Ulysses,  *429 

—  William  Caleb.  *429 

—  Wines  Hubbard,  *4o9 
Marion,  John.  50 
Marquis  of  Londonderry.  42 

Marsh.    Gertrude    Mercer    McCurdy, 
*335 

—  Stanford,  335 

—  Theodore  F.  McCurdy,  t335 
Marshfield,  Thomas.  4* 
Maryland  Hubbards.  347 
Man.  Queen.  55.  210.  211 
Mather,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard).  243 

—  Thomas.  243 

—  Thomas  G.,  *243 
Maynard.  Joseph,  41 
McCracken.  Catherine  Almira   (Hub- 
bard), 373 

—  Henry  M.,  373 

McCurdy,  Augusta  Greene,  *335 

—  Caroline  Gardner,  *335 

—  Caroline  (Hubbard).  335 

—  Gertrude  Mercer.  *335 

—  Joanna  H.  (Gillette),  *335 

—  Robert  H,  341 

—  Theodora,  +836 

—  Theodore  F  .  335 

Mel)  mongh.  Lucy  Ann  iShaler),  326 

—  Thomas.  326 
McLanahan.  Henry  L.  S.,  325 

—  Lucy  Bancroft  (Hubbard).  325 
McLean.  Alexander.  43 
Merritt,  Jane  (Hubbard).  59 

—  John,  59 

Meters  from  the  Muses,  44S 
Miles,  Isaac,  322 
Military  Graduates,  97 
Miscellany.  389 

Moodv. Harriet  Woodward  (Hubbard), 
324 

—  Simon.  324 
Moore.  Robert,  43 
Morgan.  John.  44 

Morse.  Josiah  E.  (Hubbard1,  370 

Morton.  Henry.  165 

Mumford.  Daphne   L.  (Hubbard ).  332 

—  Lncien,  332 

—  Winifred,  *332 

Murphie,  Clara   Augusta   (Hubbard). 
377 


Murphie,  Hiram  P..  377 
Myers,  Susie  (Hubbard),  436 

—  W.  11..  436 

Napier,  Eliza    (Cochrane-Johnstone), 
44 

—  Lord  William  John,  44 
Nash,  Franklin.  42> 

—  Matilda  I  Hubbard),  428 
Naunton,  Peter.  37 
Naval  Graduates.  97 
Nevans.  Ma  y  (Hubbard),  415 

—  Nathan.  415 

Nixon.  Bertha  Duffield,  3S7 

—  Mary  Stites.  337.  388 

—  Oliver  W.,  388 

—  Rhoda  (Hubbard),  387 

—  Samuel.  387,  888 

—  William  Pciin.  *387,  388 

North.    France-    Harriet    (Hubbard), 
319 

—  Lemuel.  197 

—  Rebecca  (Goodrich),  197 

—  Simeon.  3.9 

No  well,  Increase,  50 

Odd  spelling  of  the  name,  27,  71 

Officers  iu  Civil  War.  17:. 

Old  Homesteads.  -J43 

Old  Hubbaid  Bible-.  2  >7 

Olin,  Caroline  (Hubbard),  438 

—  Ciara.  *438 

—  Elgiva,  *438 

—  Ella.  *438 

—  Eunice.  *438 

—  Julia.  *438 

—  Olonzo,  43s 

—  Orrin,  *438 

—  Ward.  *43S 

Order  of  the  Cincinnati,  41S 

Origin  of  the  Name,  17 

1  Isbert,  19,  20 

Osburn.  20 

Oskvtue,  20 

Otis.  Nathaniel.  389 

—  Richard.  389 
Ouabird,  Joseph  Philip,  393 
Paine.  Lvdia  (Lester),  360 

—  Seth,  3WJ 

Parker.  Drucilla  (Hubbaid).  430 

—  Elijah,  *430 

—  Elisha.  4-'.0 

—  Leroy,  *430 

—  Maria.   *480 

—  Marv.  *430 

—  Sarah.  *430 
Parsons.  Enoch,  344 

—  Henry,  *344 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  Rosekranz,  344 
Partridge.  Charles  W.,  44" 

—  Elizabeth  (— ?).  57 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  57,  58 

—  Hon.  George,  58 

—  Olive  Bell  (Hubbard  1,  440 

—  Samuel,  58 

Patterson.  Sarah  Smith  (Halel,  317 

—  William  H.,  317 

Patton,  Laura  (Hubbard),  403 

—  William  J.,  403 

Pease.  Dorcas  (Hubbard)  Arnold,  392 

—  Elizabeth  (Emery),  390 

—  Hannah.  390 

—  Giles,  392 

—  Mary  (Ward).  390 

—  Noah.  390 

—  Robert,  392 
Peet,  Lyman.  364 
Penny  Joseph,  403 
Peyton,  John,  38 

Phillips,  Anna  (Hubbard),  263 

—  Augustus,  003 

—  Cornelius,  59 

—  Elizabeth  (Pitman  1.  59 

—  John  Marshall.  377 

—  Metta  Frances  (Hubbard  1,  377 


466 


HTHBARD   HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY 


Pierce,  Ruth  (Hubbard).  427 

—  William,  4-'7 
Pitkin,  Calvin.  392 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  388 

—  Hannah  (Pease),  392 

—  Timothy,  328 

Pitman.  Mary  (Hubbard),  59 

—  William.  59 

Poem.  '•  Through  Rings  of   Smoke," 

446 
Portal,  Wyndham  Spencer,  45 
Prescott,  Abigail  (Young),  362 

—  Jesse,  362 
Preston,  Carleton,  *370 

—  Charles  Earle,  370 

—  Earle  Hubbard,  *3T0 

—  Jennie  Loraine  (Hubbard |,  370 

—  John,  324 

—  Rebecca  (  Farrar).  324 
Pretty  Quaker's  Call  (Story),  4::0 
Prince.  John,  4s 

Pritchett,  Eliza  Jane   (Hubbard).  31s 

—  William,  348 

Prominent  American  Hubbards.  311 
Puidy,  Francis,  53 

—  Mary  (Brandish).  *53 
Putnam,  Gen.  Israel,  165 

Pye,  Albina  Frances  (Hobart),  43 

—  Henry  Arlington,  43 
Quebec  Expedition,  422 
Quincy.  Edmund,  390 

—  Joanna  ( Hoar),  390 

Ragnar  Lodbrog.  King,  18,  19.  20 
Rantoul.  Florence  Mascerene,  *336 

—  Florence  Mascerene  (Hubbard),  336 

—  Robert,  336 
Ratcliff.  John,  38 

Ray,  Deborah  (Greene1,  57 

—  Simon,  57 

Record,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  4:6 

—  Thomas,  436 
Remington,  Martha,  53 
Revolutionary  War  Patriots,  121 
Rice,  Amasa.  354 

—  Robert  A..  *354 

—  Sarah  Delano  (Hubbard),  354 
Rich.  Lois  (Hubbard),  426 
Ritchie,  Arthur  Macdonald.  Est]..  45 
Rockvvood,  Lucy  (Hubbard),  3s9 

—  Samuel,  389 

Rosekianz,  Caroline  Maria,  *344 

—  Cornelia  Willis,  *344 

—  Depne,  344 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  344 
Ross,  James  E..  349 

—  John  B.,  354 

—  Miriam  (Warren),  349 
Royalists,  Hubbard,  164 
Ruegles,  Jernsha  (Hubbard),  427 

—  William.  427 
Rumbold,  John.  348 
Russel,  Hubbard,  53 

—  Jason,  53 

Russell,  Edward  Hubbard,  320 

—  Frances  Harriet,  *32o 

—  Henrietta  Lee.  *320 

—  Huntington,  *320 

—  Lucy  Gray,  *320 

—  Lucy  McDonough  (Hubbard),  826 

—  Mary,  *320 

—  Mary  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  320 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  53 

—  Philip  Gray,  320 

—  Robert  Gray,  320 

—  Samuel,  326 

—  Talcott,  *320 

—  Thomas  Hubbard.  *320 

—  Rev.  William.  49 

—  William  Huntington.  *320 
Saltus,  Francis  H..  4ol 

—  Francis  Saltus,  -101 

—  Julia  (Hubbard  1.401 
Savage,  Ephraim,  56 


Sawyer,  George  Parsons,  57 

—  Judith  Ray,  *57 

—  Judith  Kay  (Hubbard),  57 
Scotch  Hubbards.  4M9 

Seuddcr,  Ethlinda  Jane  (Blatchford), 
*385 

—  Gardiner  Hubbard,  +335 

—  Samuel  Hubbard,  335 
Shaul,  Bulia  F.  (Hubbard),  430 

—  Johnson.  430 

—  Julia  J.  (  Hubbard),  430 

—  Mary  (Wilber),  430 

—  Stephen,  430 

Shed,  Jane  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  3*6 

Sidney,  Sir  Robert,  39 

Sidroc,  20 

Sill,  Joseph.  248 

Six  Hubbard  Sisters,  861 

Skinner.  Martha  (Hubbard),  98 

Smith,  Bessie  Lucia,  +354 

—  Edward  Smith,  *354 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard).  6u 

—  Jacob,  101 

—  John,  55 

—  Jonathan,  415 

—  Lucy  Ann  (Garlic).  364 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  415 

—  Lucy  Hyde  (Hubbard).  354 

—  Marcus,   364 

—  Margeret  L.  (Brown),  354 

—  Samuel,  6o 

—  Solomon  B.,  354 

Sons  of  the  American  Revolution,  419 

—  of  the  Revolution,  419 

—  of  Revolutionary  Sires,  419 
Squires,  Byron  Titus,  356 

—  Mary  (Eggleston).  356 

St.  Clair,  Frances  (Hubbard).  165 

—  Gen.,  165 

—  Robert,  165 

—  Clair,  St.  Edmund,  King.  20 
steams,  Julius  Augustus.  355 

—  Mary  Ann  (Wood),  355 
Stinnett.  Edward,  55 
Sterns,  Charles,  438 

—  Sarah  ( Norris),  438 
Stewart,  Emily  Anne  (Hobart),  41 

—  Hon.  Robert,  41.  42 
stone,  Calvin  Reed,  371 

—  Susan  (Fitch).  371 
Stow,  Azuba  (— ?).  49 

—  Daniel.  49 

Stowell,  Emeline  (Hubbard).  428 
Strader,  Alice  (Beaman),  372 

—  Cornelia  Frances,  +372 

—  Cornelia  Frances  (Hubbard).  371 

—  Edmund  S.,  +372 

—  Frances  Cornelia.  *372 

—  George  Henry.  *372 

—  George  McLeod.  +372 

—  Jacob.  *  T372 

—  Julia  Eliza.  *372 

—  Margaret  (Marshall),  372 

—  M  irv  Catherine.  *372 

—  Peter  Wilson,  371.  *372 

—  Sarah  (Kepler).  372 

—  William  Matthew,  *371,  372 
Straw.  Abigail  (— ?),  377 

—  Jeremiah.  377 

Stryker,  Fiances  Elizabeth  (Hubbard), 
314 

—  John,  314 
Sutton,  Amos.  428 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard)  Column.  428 
Swan.  Marian,  *335 

—  Marv  Winthrop  (Hubbard),  335 

—  William,  *335 

—  William  D  ,  335 
Sweat,  Moses  E..  324 

—  Rebecca  Preston  (Hubbard),  324 
Swift,  Alexander.  9S 

—  Almira  (Hubbard).  OS 
Sylvester,  Elizabeth,  +359 


Sylvester,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  358 

—  Hannah  Goodrich  (Holt),  357 

—  Henry  Hamilton,  358 

—  Hubbard,  +359 
-  John,  +357.  359 

—  Laura,  +359 

—  Laura  (McFall),  359 

—  Martha  (Woods).  350 

—  Richard  Henry,  *358,  +359 

—  Ruth,  +359 

—  Willie,  +359 
Symonds,  Samuel,  50,  415 

—  Susannah  (Hubbard),  415 
Tardy  Data,  426 

Taylor,  Hubbard,  11(55 

—  President  Zachary.  +165 
Tenney,  Phebe  Colburn  (Smith),  386 

—  Randolph  E.,  3~6 
Thompson,  Abram,  373 

—  Amos,  376 

—  James,  376 

—  Lema  ( White),  376 

—  Lucv  (Holmes).  376 

—  Nancy  (Hubbard),  373 
Thornton.  John,  55 
Tibbetts,  David,  377 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  377 
Tilney,  Philip,  3s 

Todd,  Mary  Lucinda  (Hubbard),  343 

—  William  E.,  348 
Torrey,  Joseph,  55 

Tracy,  Eliza  Martin  (Deunie).  336 

—  Frederick  Uriah,  336 
Trumbull,  Jonathan,  342 
T.yon,  Amos,  212 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  212 
Tucker,  James.  391 

—  Rachel  (Hubbard).  391 
Turner.  Rebecca  (Garland).  366 

—  Thomas.  366 
Tuthill,  John.  56 

—  Lieut.  Zechariah.  56 

—  Mary  (Holyoke),  56 

—  Richard.  56 

Tyler,  Chester  William,  *334 

—  Julia  Alice  (  Hubbard),  334 

—  Louise  Pallister.  *334 

—  Nellie  Chamberlin,  *334 

—  Wat.  Henry.  334 
Unclassified  Data,  389 
Union  Defenders,  175 

Variation  of  spelling  the  name,  27,  71 
Vassall.  Ann  (Davis).  390 

—  Leonard,  390 

—  Margaret  (Hubbard),  390 

—  Ruth  (Gale).  390 

—  William.  390 
Virginia  Hubbards,  79 
Warren,  Moses,  100 
Washington,  George,  342 
Watson.  George  W.,  34b 

—  Mary  (— ?),  348 

Watts,  Anna  (Hubbard),  34S 

—  Rowland,  34s 
Weare,  John.  336 

—  Martha  (Campbell).  336 
Welch.  Edward  Hubbard,  *42S 

—  Edward  Myron.  *428 

—  Elizabeih  Louisa,  *428 

—  James.  428 

—  John  Berry,  *428 

—  Lavina  M.  (Hubbard).  42S 

—  William  Collin.  *428 
Wetmore.  Chauncey,  263 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  263 
Wharton,  Richard.  56 
Wheelwright,  John,  50 
White,  John,  375 

—  Sophia  (Wilson)  Hubbard,  375 
Whitmore.  Gordon.  324 

—  Zippnrah  (Woodward).  324 
Whit.nev.    Ann  Elizabeth  (Hubbard,) 

403 


INDEX. 


467 


Wilder,  Fannie  A.,  *1*K 

—  Frank  Curtis,  *197 

—  Rebecca  Curtis  (Hubbard),  197 

—  Walter  L.,  *l'.t7 

—  William  Frank,  197 
Wiley.  Levin.  349 
William,  King,  40 
Williams,  Ernest  Hubbard,  *■>> 

—  John,  43,  47 

—  Mary  Louise,  *380 

—  Roger,  55 

—  Sarah  Sill.  *380 

—  Sarah  Sill  (Hubbard).  379,  380 

—  Warren  Josiah,  *3^0 

—  Warren  S.,  380 


Williamson,    Mary   Ellen   (Hubbard), 
366 

—  Stephen  Strvker.  366 
Willis,  Frank  A.,  348 

—  Sarah  Elmer  (Hubbard),  348 
Wilson,  Anthony.  53 

—  Edna  (Chapman).  429 

—  John,  56 

—  P.  Strong,  429 

—  Rachel  (Hubbard)  Brandish,  53 
Winthrop,  Governor,  50 

—  John,  56 

Woodes,  Caroline  Frances  (Hubbard), 
377 

—  George,  377 


Woodruff.  De  Wyllvs,  359 
Woods,  W.  W.,  359 
Wright.  Dorcas  (Weed),  390 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  390 

—  James,  390 

—  Thomas,  390 
Wyman,  Earl.  *438 

—  Elgiva  E.  (Hubbard),  433 

—  Fred,  *4-> 

—  George.  43S 

—  Inez,  *43-> 

—  Ree,  *43S 


SPECIMEN    LETTERS. 

Quantities  of  letters  are  in  file,  similar  to  the  following,  which  of  course  it 
is  impossible  to  answer  without  more  data  upon  which  to  hang  a  tracing 
thread. 


-.   1895 


H.   P.   Hubbard,  Publisher. 

Dear  Sir  :    "...     My  father  was  ,  and  my  mother 


was 


They  were  married His  father  was 

,  born   at  None  of  our  family  have  any 

further  records.     Can  you  locate  us  as  belonging  to  any  particular  branch? 
Would  be  willing  to  pay  for  information." 


Now  it  is  too  bad  that  such  inquirers  cannot  be  gratified  (and  it  exemplifies 
the  necessity  of  keeping  records),  but  of  course  it  is  impossible  to  do  this  in 
most  cases  without  some  clew.  The  publisher  will  be  constantly  receiving 
new  data,  and  expects  to  keep  a  copy  of  this  History  with  corrections  and 
additions  down  to  date.  He  will  at  all  times  be  glad  to  answer  queries  from 
kinsfolk,  so  far  as  lies  in  his  power.  Exhaustive  searches,  however,  must  of 
necessity  be  charged  for  in  proportion  to  the  amount  of  labor  involved. 


SPECIAL  FAMILY  INDEX. 


DESCENDANTS  OF    DANIEL    HUBBARD    AND    ELIZABETH    JORDAN. 


Ball,  Charles,  257 

—  Emily  (Chittenden  1,  257 
Bartlett,  Deborah  (Hubbard),  25b' 

—  Harvey,  *25K 

—  Hubbard,  *250 

—  John,  *250,  258 

—  Lois  (Chidsey),  258 

—  Samuel,  *256 
Bassett,  Charles,  860 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard  ).  260 
Bebee,  Temperance  ( Hubbard),  259 

—  Warren,  259 

Bishop,  Jonathan  Chittenden,  258 

—  Lydia  (Tyler).  258 
Brown.  Merritt  Haven,  200 
Buck,  David,  255 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  255 
Child?,  John  VV.,  25!) 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  259 
Chittenden,  Joseph,  258 

—  Mary  (Kimberley  ),  25S 
Clements,  Frederic,  259 

—  Laura  (Hubbard),  259 
Cook.  Isaac.  255 

—  Mercy  (Hubbard),  255 
Crnttenden,  Isaac,  255 

—  Lyd  a  (Thompson),  255 
Davis,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  25S 

—  George  B.,  260 

—  Hannah  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  260 

—  John,  25cS 

Dudley,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  255 

—  Ann  (Robinson)  255 

—  Joseph,  255 

Elliott,  Hannah  (Hubbard)  Stone,  257 

—  William,  257 

Elwell,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  258 

—  James.  258 
Fairchild,  Asher.  256,  259 

—  Charlotte,  *256 

—  Grace,  *256 

—  Harriet.  *256 

—  Hubbard,  *256 

—  Lavinia.  *256 

—  Nancy.  *256 

—  Phebe  (— ?),  256 

—  Rebecca,  *256 

—  Samuel,  256 

—  Thankful  (Hubbard),  256,  259 

—  Ward,  *25fi 

Farnsworth,  Caroline  (Hubbard),  259 

—  Edwards,  259 

Foote,  Christopher  Spencer,  257 

—  Eliza  (Spencer),  257 

—  George,  257 

—  George  Augustus.  *257 

—  Hannah  Jane  (Hubbard),  257 

—  Henry  Ward,  *257 

—  Laura  (Hubbard),  258 

—  Lois  (Hubbard),  259 

—  Lucius,  258.  259 

—  Margaret  Spencer,  *257 

—  Mary.  *257 

—  Robert  Elliott,  *257 
Fowler,  Abigail  (Hall),  258 

—  Abraham,  256 

—  Andrew.  256 

—  Belinda  (Ford),  259 

—  David  S.,  259 

468 


Fowler,  Elizabeth,  256 

—  Elizabeth  (Baitlett),  256 

—  Eunice  Cornelia  (Hubbard),  260 

—  Fowler,  Horace,  260 

—  John,  258 

—  Martha  (Stone),  256 

—  Richard,  259 

—  Sally  (Benton),  259 

Frisbie,  Harriet  Ellen  (Fowler)  Hub 
bard.  259 

—  Russeil.  259 
Goldsmith,   Daniel,  257 

—  Gertrude  (Baldwin),  258 

—  James  Daniel,  258 

—  Laura  (Frisbie),  257 
Hale,  Augustus  S.,  2:  0 

—  Wealthy  Ann  (Hubbard),  260 
Hall,  Benjamin.  258 

—  Beulah  (Fowler).  258 
Hamilton,  John.  258 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  258 
Hart.  Daniel.  258 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  258 

—  Patience  (Hubbard),  258 

—  Samuel,  258 

Hawley,  Senator  Joseph,  257 
Hoadley,  Kidder,  259 

—  Sarah  Ophelia  (Hubbard),  259 
Hopson,  Deborah  (Bartlett),  256 

—  John,  256 
Hotchkiss.  Ebenezer.  259 

—  Ruth  (Hubbard),  259 
Hubbard.  Abigail,  255,  258 

—  Abigail  (Goldsmith)  Frisbie,  257 

—  Abraham.  256.  25s,  260 

—  Ada  Miranda,  26  I 

—  Alaneon,  258 

—  Alfred,  258 

—  Amanda  (Hall).  258 

—  Amv  (Wicks),  258 

—  Angeline  (Hatch),  259 

—  Ann,  256.  259 

—  Anna,  256 

—  Anne.  256,259 

—  Anne  (Gould).  25« 

—  AniiLM  Phillips),  259 

—  Bela.  256,  258,  259 

—  Betsey.  250 

—  Caroline.  259 

—  Charlotte  ( Rose),  257 

—  Chauncey,  259 

—  Clark,  259 

—  Clarrissa  (Soper),  258 

—  Cornelia  (Larrabee),  257 

—  Cynthia.  259 

—  Daniel,  255.  25fi.  257,  258,  260 

—  Daniel  Ball,  25T 

—  Daniel  Clifford,  260 

—  Daniel  Russell,  257 

—  David  H..  260 

—  Deborah.  250 

—  Deborah  (Hopson),  256 

—  Diana,  256 

—  Diana  (Ward),  256 

—  Dinah,  258 

—  Dorothy,  255 

—  Douglas,  250 

—  Ebenezer,  255 

—  Eber,  258,  259 


Hubbard.  Edith  Marv,  260 

—  Elizabeth,  255,  256.  251.  258.  259 

—  Elizabeth   (Crnttenden),    255,  256, 

258 

—  Elizabeth  (Douglas).  25(i 

—  Elizabeth  (Jordan).  255 

—  Elizabeth  (Lord).  255 

—  Ellen  Charlotte,  25> 

—  Ellen  Maria.  257 

—  Elvea  (Sibley),  259 

—  Elvira  Henrietta  (Palmer),  258 

—  Emily,  257 

—  Emily  (Angell),  257 

—  Emily  S.  (Ball).  257 

—  Ernest  Latimer.  259 

—  Eunice  (Bartlett),  258 

—  Eunice  Cornelia,  200 

—  Eunice  (Window).  -i(10 

—  Eva  Baldwin  (Goldsmith),  258 

—  Fanny.  259 

—  Frederic,  259 
?  (Frisbie),  259 

—  George,  255,  257,  25S 

—  George  Augustus,  259 

—  George  Henry,  257 

—  Grove.  2.V.I 

—  Hannah,  256,  258 

—  Hannah  Elizabeth,  2CC 

—  Hannah  (Fowler).  25ti.  257 

—  Hannah  (Hodges).  25s.  260 

—  Hannah  .lane,  257 

—  Harriet  Ellen  (Fowl)  r),  259 

—  Harrv.  2."i(i.  259 

—  Harvev.  259 

—  Hattie  (Dudley).  S59 

—  Hattie  (Palmer).  2ti0 

—  Henry.  256   258.  259 

—  Herbert.  Washington,  260 

—  Horace,  259 

—  Ida  Gen  rude.  257 

—  James,  257.  25s 

—  James  Rose,  '.'58 

—  Jane  (Brown).  200 

—  Jared  Foote.  2(i0 

—  Jared  Hutchinson,  '.57 

—  Jeremiah.  25s,  259,  260 

—  Jerusha.  25s 

—  Jerusha  (Fowler).  25S,  259 

—  Jerusha  (Tyler).  25s 

—  Joanna.  2">s 

—  Joanna  ( Stevens, ,  25S 

—  Joel.  258 

—  John,  255,  256,  257,  258,  259 

—  John  Bartlett.  258 

—  John  Henry,  257 

—  Joseph.  259 

—  Josephine,  257 

—  Julia,  259 

—  Laura,  5:58,  259 

—  Leah.  258 

—  Levi,  250,  259 

—  Levina,  259 

—  Lois.  259 

—  Louisa,  257 

—  Louisa  (Cowles),  259 

—  Lucv.  259 

—  Mabel  Carpenter,  258 

—  Margaret,  259 

—  Maria  C.  Ayers,  259 


INDEX. 


469 


Hubbard,  Maria  (Foster),  259 

—  Martha  (Rogers),  259 

—  Martin.  259 

—  Mary.  255,  257,  259 

—  Mary  (Bishop),  255,  25S 

—  Mary  (Bishop)  Hubbard,  258,  259 

—  Mary  (Harrison),  259 

—  Mary  Jane,  257 

—  Mary  (Landon),  25? 

—  Mary  (Linsley),  257 

—  Mary  Linsley,  257 

—  Mary  (Rose).  258 

—  Mary  (Waterman),  259 

—  Mercy.  2.")5 

—  Morriit  Brown,  260 

—  Nancy,  'J5»i.  257 

—  Nathan,  259 

—  Olive,  258 

—  Olive  (Jr.dd)  Barnes,  258 

—  Orlando  Norris,  259 

—  Orra,  258,  2tl0 

—  Orra  (Hubbard),  258,  260 

—  Palmyra,  258 

—  Parnell  (Kimberley).  258,  260 

—  Parnell  Lucretia,  2ti0 
"  —  Patience.  258 

—  Patience  (Chittenden),  258 

—  Rachel.  258 

—  Rachel  (Scranton).  258 

—  Rebecca,  260 

—  Rebecca  (Fairchild),  259 

—  Ruggles,  256 

—  Ruth.  259 

—  Samantha  (Fowler),  259 

—  Samuel,  257.  258 

—  Samuel  Fowler,  259 


Hubbard,  Samuel  Goldsmith,  257 

—  Samuel  Landon,  257 

—  Sarah,  258 

—  Sarah  ( Burgess),  257 

—  Sarah  Ophelia,  259 

—  Sarah  (Tyrrell),  255 

—  Selina  (Tyler),  259 

—  Solomon,  258,  259 

—  Sophia,  257 

—  Susan  ( Russell),  257 

—  Temperance,  259 

—  Thankful,  256,  259 

—  Thaukful  (Stone),  256 

—  Thomas,  257 

—  Thomas  Hill.  256 

—  Timothy,  258,  259 

—  Wealthy  Ann,  260 

—  William,  257,  25S,  259 

—  William  Goldsmith,  258 

—  William  Gould,  256 

—  William  Henry,  256.  257 

—  William  Hodges,  259 

—  William  Jared,  2(50 

—  Zadoc.  258 

—  Zoniah  (Stone),  258 
Jackson.  Andrew,  259 

—  Ann  (Hubbard),  259 

Johnson.  Diana  (Ward)  Hubbard,  256 

—  Nathaniel.  25ti 
Jordan,  James,  255 

—  John,  255 

—  Mary.  255 

—  Thomas,  255 
Landon,  Jared,  257 

—  Martha  (Hutchinson),  257 
Leete,  Andrew,  255 


Leete,  Anna  (Payne),  255 

—  Caleb,  255 

—  Elizabeth  (Jordan),  255 

—  Mary  (Hay)  Newman,  255 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  255 

—  Sarah  (Rutherford),  255 

—  William,  255 
Linsley,  Chauncey,  257 

—  Parnell  (Gorham).  25? 
Newton,  Jeremiah,  258 

—  Rachel  (Hubbard).  258 
Richmond,  N'ancv  (Hubbard),  257 

—  William,  257 

Rogers,  Jernsha  (Hubbard),  258 

—  Samuel,  25b 

Rose,  Hannah  (Fowler),  257 

—  Jonathan.  257 
Russell.  Augustus.  257 

—  Lvdia  (Rose),  257 
Scranton.  Mary  (Field),  258 

—  Nathan.  258 
.Seward.  Amos.  -258 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard).  258 
Stone,  Hannah  (Hubbard).  257 

—  Surah  (Hatch),  256 

—  Timothy.  257 

—  William.  "256 
Wadsworth.  George,  256 

—  Nancy  (Hubbard).  256 
Ward,  Andrew.  256 

—  Deborah  (Jacobs  or  Joy),  256 

—  Elizabeth  (Fowler),  256 
Watrous,  Rachel  (Hubbard),  258 

—  Timothy.  258 
Welton,  Francis,  2(0 

—  Parnell  Lucretia  (Hubbard),  260 


DESCENDANTS    OF    EDMUND    HOBART. 


Adams,  Elihu,  157,  158 

—  Elisha,  158 

—  John,  157,  158 

—  Susannah,  158 
Alden,  Aaron,  *  158 

—  Marcus,  158 

—  Salome  (Hobart),  158 

—  Susan,  *158 
Aldus,  John,  155 

—  Sarah  (Eliot),  155 
Allen,  Jonathan,  157 
Bassett,  Joseph,  151 

—  Martha  (Hobart),  151 
Beal,  Caleb.  *151 

I —  Jacob,  *151 

—  John,  *150.  151 

—  Joshua,  *151 

—  Martha,  *151 

—  Mary,  *151 

—  Nathaniel,  *  151 

—  Nazereth  (Hobart),  150 

—  Rebecca,  *151 

—  Sarah,  *151 

—  Tamar  ( Hobart),  151 
Bradford,  Governor.  155 

—  Jael  (Hobart),  155 

—  Joseph,  155 
Brigham,  Charles,  *158 

—  Henrv,  158 

—  Henry  H.,  *158 

—  Joseph  W..  *158 

—  Mary  (Hobart),  *158 
Brown,  Hannah  (Hobart),  155 

—  John,  *155 
Burnap,  Rev.  N.  C,  161 
Burrill.  Henry,  151 

—  Martha  (Hobart).  J51 
Carter.  Lucy  Lazell  (  Hobart).  158 

—  Richard  Bridge,  15s 
Champnev,  Aaron,  *158 

—  Abbe.  *15S 

—  Abigail  Adams  (Hobart),  158 


C'hampney,  John,  *158 

—  John  S..  158 

—  Nathaniel.  *15S 

—  Sarah,  *158 

—  Sarah  (Hobart).  158 

Cleverly,  Sarah  (Hobart)  Cowell,  163 
Cobb,  Anna  Jane  *162 

—  Jai.eTalman  (Hobart),  162 

—  Sarah  Jewett,  *162 

—  William.  *162 
Cowell,  Edward.  163 

—  Sarah  (Hobart),  163 

Cutler,  Lucy  Lazell  (Hobart)  Carter, 
158 

—  William  J.,  158 
Dunbar,  Alden  F..  159 

—  Amelia  (Hobart).  j5"* 

—  Deborah  Ann  (Hobart),  158 

—  William  H.,  158 
Dyer,  Christopher,  158 
Eames,  Lieut.  Anthony,  151,  153 
Eliot,  Francis,  156 

—  Jacob,  163 

—  John.  155,  156 

—  Peter,  163 

Emmons,  Judith  (Hobart),  156 

—  Obadiah,  156 
Everson,  Isaac.  152 

—  Lucy  (Hobart).  152 
Faxon,  Richard,  157 
Grafton,  Hannali  (Hobart),  163 

—  Hannah  (Hobbard),  163 

—  Joseph,  *1B3 
Harden,  John,  157 
Hayden  (?).  Augustus.  *158 

—  (?),  Caroline  H.,  *158 

—  (?),  Ephraim.  *158 

—  (?).  Jared.  *158 

—  (?),  Susan  H.  *15S 

—  Susannah  (Hobart).  158 

—  Zebah,  l."8 

Hobart,  Aaron,  156,  157,  158,  161, 162 


Hobart,  Abie!,  156 

—  Abigail,  154,  155,  156 

—  Abigail  Adams,  158 

—  Abigail  (Jones),  158 

—  Abishai  (Soul),  151 

—  Adams,  158 

—  Albert,  152,  161 

—  Albert  Jewett.  161 

—  Albert  Winslow,  161 

—  Alithea.  154 

—  Allen,  157 

—  Alonzo  C,  152 

—  Amelia,  158 

—  Andrew,  158 

—  Ann  (—  ■;)  Lyford.  150 

—  Anna  (Briggs),  llil 

—  Anna  Caroline,  161 

—  Anna  E.  (  Babbett).  162 

—  Anna  E.  (Smith),  lttl 

—  Anna  Elizabeth,  162 

—  Anna  Mann  (Brown),  162 

—  Anna  Maria,  161 

—  Annabel.  151 

—  Anne  (NewelH,  162 

—  Anne  (Ptotner).  156 

—  Annie  Mann.  162 

—  Arabella.  151 

—  Arthur.  162 

—  Bathsheba.  154.  155 

—  Benjamin,  157.  158,  162 

—  Bessie  Jewett,  161 

—  Bethiah,  155 

—  Betsey.  157 

—  Caleb",  151,  156,  157 

—  Caroline,  161 

—  Caroline  Brown,  162 

—  Catherine.  158 

—  Catherine  (Eastman),  155 

—  Clara.  162 

—  Clarence.  162 

—  Cornelia.  162 

—  Daniel,  151 


47Q 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Hobart,  David,  154,  156 

—  Deborah,  156,  163 

—  Deborah  Ann,  158,  161,  162 

—  Deborah  (Lazell),  158 

—  Deborah  Winslow  (Thomas),  161 

—  Dorothy,  155 

—  Dorothv  (Whiting),  154 

—  Edmund,   149,   150,   151,  152,  153, 

156,  158,  162 

—  Edward,  15S,  161 

—  Edward  Everett,  162 

—  Edwin,  161 

—  Eiihn,  157,  158 

—  Elijah,  151 

—  Eliza,  158 

—  Elizabeth,  151,  154,  155,  157 

—  Elizabeth  (—5),  151 

—  Elizabeth  (  Ball),  151 

—  Elizabeth  (Church),  156 

—  Elizabeth  (  —  *)  Faxon,  156,  157 

—  Elizabeth  (Hutchinson),  158 

—  Elizabeth  (Pilsbury).  157 

—  Elizabeth  (Warren),  151 

—  Ellen  Frances.  161 

—  Ellen  Ibrook,  163 

—  Ellen  M.  (Grose),  152 

—  Emily  Florence,  161 

—  Kmily  (Haywood),  158 

—  Emily  Jane,  161 

—  Emma  Jane,  151 

—  Enoch,  163 

—  Esther,  157 

—  Esther  (Allen),  157 

—  Eunice,  157 

—  Everett.  162 

—  Frances  Wells,  162 

—  Francis,  151 

—  George,  158 

—  George  A.,  152 

—  George  Burnap,  161 

—  George  Williams.  161 

—  Gershom,  154,  155 

—  Grace  Agnes,  161 

—  firace  Darling,  162 

—  Grace  Lazell,  158 

—  Hannah,  154,  155,  156,  157,  163 

—  Hannah  (Burr).  151 

—  Hannah  (Gold),  151 

—  Hannah  (Harris),  163 

—  Harriet  Briggs,  161 

—  Harriet  Whitney,  162 

—  Helen,  15S 

—  Henry,  161 

—  Henry  C,  151 

—  Henry  Lee.  162 

—  Hepzibah.  155 
— Ichabod, 154 

—  Irene,  154 

—  Isaac,  156.  157,  158 

—  Israel,  154.  155,  156,  157 

—  Jacob,  157 

—  Jael,  154,  155 

—  James,  162 

—  James  Frederick,  161 

—  James  Holbrook,  162 

—  James  Thomas,  161,  162 

—  Jane  (Jones),  15S 

—  Jane  Talman.  161,  162 

—  Japhet,  154,  155 

—  Jeremiah,  154 

—  Joanna,  155,  158 

—  Joanna  (Chandler),  151 

—  Joanna  (Hersey),  15S 

—  Joanna  (Quincy),  156 

—  John.  151,  154.  157,  158 

—  John  Frederick.  162 

—  John  Henry,  162 

—  John  Lazell.  158 

—  John  Thomas,  152 

—  Jonathan,  157 

—  Joseph,  156.  157. 158 

—  Joseph  Henry,  161 


Hobart,   Joshua,  149,    150,   153,   154, 
156,  157,  162,  163 

—  Josiah,  154,  155 

—  Judith,  156 

—  Julia  A.  (Noyes),  161 

—  Katharine  Lawrence,  162 

—  Lilla,  151 

—  Louis  E.,  152 

—  Louisa  (Pool),  151 

—  Lucy,  152 

—  Lucy  (Lazell).  158 

—  Lacy  Lazell.  15S 

—  Lvd'ia,  154,  156 

—  Lydia  (Clark),  161 

—  Margaret,  155 

—  .Margaret  (Vassell),  154 

—  .Maria,  158 

—  Maria  (Leach),  158 

—  Maria  Otis,  151 

—  Martha,  151 

—  Martha  (Stoddart),  151 

—  Mary,  151,  155,  156,  157,  158,  162 

—  Mary  (— ?),  155 

—  Mary  A.  (Webb),  158 

—  Mary  (Eliot).  156 

—  Mary  Elizabeth.  151,  158 

—  Mary  Gay,  152 

—  Mary  (Harden)   157 

—  Mary  Isabelle,  158,  161 

—  Mary  Jane,  152 

—  Mary  (.Kilby).  158 

—  Mary  Lydia,  162 

—  Mary  (May hew).  158 

—  Mary  (Orcnt),  151 

—  Mary  S.  (dishing),  151 

—  Mary  (Stovvell).  157 

—  Mary  (Sunderland)  Rainsford,  154 

—  Mary  T.  (Burnapl,  161 

—  Mary  Tyler,  162 

—  Mehitable,  151 

—  Moses,  156,  157 

—  Nancy,  151 

—  Nathan,  155,  158,  161 

—  Nathaniel,  155,  156,  157,  161 

—  Nazereth,  150 

—  Nehemiah,  154.  155 

—  Noah,  156,  161 

—  Octavia,  158,  162 

—  Octavia  (Hobart).  158.  162 

—  Peter,   149.150.   151,   15^,153,154, 

155,  156,  157,  163 

—  Polly,  157 

—  Priscilla,  151 

—  Kebecca,  150.  151,  155,  156 

—  Rebecca  (— ?),  157 

—  Rebekah,  149 

—  Richard  Everett,  161 

—  Rufus  H.,  152 

—  Ruth,  155 

—  Sally  (Dyer),  157 

—  Salome,  15S 

—  Samuel,  151 

—  Sarah,  149.   150,  151.  155.   156,  15S, 

162,  163 

—  Sarah  (Aldus).  155 

—  Sarah  Farmer  (.lewett),  161 

—  Sarah  J.  (Ball),  152 

—  Sarah  (Jackson),  155 

—  Sarah  Jane.  161 

—  Sarah  Jones,  15s 

—  Sarah  (Joyce),  156 

—  Sarah  Mann  (Everett),  162 

—  Sarah  (Wetherill),  155 

—  Seth.  157 

—  Shebuel,  155 

—  Solomon,  163 

—  Susan,  158 

—  Susanna.  157 

—  Susannah,  158 

—  Susannah  (Adams),  157 

—  Susannah  (Eliot),  168 

—  Susunnah  (Newcomb),  157 

—  Sybil,  151 


Hobart.  Tamar,  151 

—  Thankful,  161 

—  Thankful  (— ?)  Adams,  158 

—  Thomas,  150,  153,  156,  157,  161 

—  Victoria,  162 

—  Walter  Henry,  161 
(Waterman),  157 

—  William  Dunbar,  162 

—  William  E.,  152 

—  William  Newell,  16-2 
Hobbard,  Hannah.  163 

Holmes,  Anna  Maria  (Hobart),  161 

—  Robert  P.,  161 

Hubbard.  Adolphus  Skinner,  149 

—  Anne  (Ptomer),  156 

—  Caleb,  156 

—  Hannah,  157 

—  Thomas,  156.  157 
Hubberd,  Edmund,  150 
Hutchinson.  Joseph,  15S 

—  Rachel  (-?),  15S 
Jackson,  Edward,  155 

—  Elizabeth  (Oliyer),  155 
Jacob,  Nicholas,  151 
Jones,  Abigail  G.,  *157 

—  Betsey,  *157 

—  David,  *157 

—  Elias.  *157 

—  Elizabeth  (Hobart),  157 

—  Esther.  157 

—  Jacob  H..  *157 

—  Jane  T.,  *157 

—  Marv,  *157 

—  Sarah.  *157 
Kilby,  Daniel,  158 

—  Joanna  (Hobart).  158 
Lazell,  Edmund.  158 

—  Mary  (Ford).  158 

—  Sylvanus,  158 
Leach,  Andrew.  158 

Leavitt,  Bathsheba  (Hobart),  155 

—  John.  155 
Lewis,  Asa,  158 

—  Sarah  (Hobart),  15S 

—  Susannah  Cushman    *158 
Lincoln,  Deborah  (Hobart),  163 

—  Joshua.  163 

—  Lydia  ( Hobart),  156 

—  Thomas.  156 

Lockett,  Benjamin  Carter,  *158 

—  James,  15s 

—  Madeline  Lazelle.  *158 

—  Mary  (Hobart),  158 
Lyford,  Rev.  John,  150 
Manning.  Return,  151 

—  Sarah  (  Hobart),  151 
Mason.  Daniel.  156 

—  Mary  (Hobart),  156 

—  Peter,  *156 

—  Rebecca  (Hobart).  156 
Newcomb,  Francis,  157 

—  Peter,  157 

—  Rachel  (— ?),  157 

—  Susan  (Cutting),  157 
Nickerson,  Heman,  158 

—  Sarah  Jones  (Hobart),  158 
Papendick,  Eleanor  Christine,  *161 

—  Ernest  Albert  Peaskes,  *161 

—  George,  161 

—  George  Christopher,  *161 

—  Sarah  Jane  (Hobart),  161 
Perry  Daniel.  161 

—  Thankful  (Hobart),  161 
Pilsbury,  Jacob,  157 
Pool,  David,  151 
Prouty.  Elijah,  151 

—  Priscilla  (Hobart).  151 

—  Svbil  (Hobart).  151 

—  William,  151 
Quincy.  Edmund,  156 
Record,  Hannah  (Hobart),  157 

—  John,  157 

Ripley,  Elizabeth  (Hobart).  155 


INDEX. 


471 


Ripley,  John,  151,  155 

—  Mary  (.Hobtirt),  151 

—  William,  155 

Stoddart,  Maria  Otis  (Hobart),  152 

—  William,  152 

Tucker.    Elizabeth  (Hobart),  151 

—  John,  151 

Turner,  Bathsheba  (Hobart)  Leavitt, 
155 

—  Joseph,  *155 
Vassell,  Ann  (— ?),  154 

—  William.  154 
Vining,  Ebed,  Jr.,  151 

—  Sarah  (Hobart),  151 
Warren,  Gen.  Joseph,  157 


White,  E-ther  (Hobart),  157 

—  Micah,  157 
Whiting,  Eleazer,  151 

—  Elizabeth  (St.  John),  154 

—  Ephraim,  151 

—  Joseph.  154 

—  Mehitable  (Hobart),  151 

—  Nancy  (Hobart),  151 

—  Samuel,  154 

Whitman  ('/),  Augustus.  *153 

—  (?),  Caroline  H.,  *15s 

—  (?),  Ephraim,  *158 

—  Jared.  *158 

—  (?),  Susan  H.,*158 

—  Susannah  (Hobart)  Hayden,  158 


Williamson,  Caroline  (Hobart),  161 

—  Emily  Rawlins,  *ltil 

—  Jane  Taylor,  *1H1 

—  William  Henry,  *101 

—  William  Rawlins,  161 
Winslow,  Edward,  161 
Winthrop,  Governor,  153 
Wyllis,  Elizabeth  (Hobart),  154 

—  George,  *155 

—  Hezekiah,  154 

—  Mary  (Woodbridge),  155  . 

—  Ruth  (Haynes),  155 

—  Samuel,  155 


DESCENDANTS    OP    GEORGE    HUBBARD,    OP    GUILFORD,    CT. 


Bishop,  Anne  (— ?),  199 

—  John.  199.  20(1 

—  Stephen,  200 

—  Susannah  (Goldham).  200 

—  Tabitha  Wilkinson,  200 
Fowler.  Abigail,  *204 

—  Abraham,  *204 

—  Elizabeth,  *204 

—  John,  *2n4 

—  Mary,  *204 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  204 

—  Mehetable.  *204 

—  Sarah  (— ?),  2U4 

—  William,  204 
Hall,  Phineas,  205 

—  Rachel  (Savage)  Spinning,  205 
Harrison.  Daniel,  204,  205 

—  Richard,  Jr.,  204 
Hubbard,  Abigail,  204,  205 

—  Daniel,  204.  '.'05 

—  Elizabeth,  204,  205 


Hubbard,  George.  199,  21)4,  205 

—  Hannah,  204.  205 

—  John,  204,  205 

—  Mary,  204 

—  Mary  (Bishop).  199,  2i*) 

—  Sarah,  204 

—  Thomas,  200 

—  William.  200.  204,  205 
Melyen,  Abigail,  *204 

—  Cornelius,  204 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  204 

—  Isaac,  204 

—  Jacob,  204 

—  Samnel.  *2(I4 

Norton,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  205 

—  Grace  (— ?),  205 

—  Hannah.  2o5 

—  Hannah  (Stone),  205 

—  John,  205 

—  Marv,  205 

—  Samuel,  205 


Norton,  Thomas,  205 

Savage,  Elizabeth  (D'Aubin),  205 

—  John.  205 
Spinning.  Abigail,  *205 

—  Abigail  (Hubbard).  205 

—  David,  *205 

—  Deborah  (Bartlett),  205 

—  Edward,  205 

—  Humphrey,  205 

—  John,  *205 

—  Mary,  205 

—  Rachel  (Savage),  205 
Steele,  Betsey  (Bishop),  200 

—  James,  200 

Si  one,  Hannah  (— ?),  205 

—  William.  205 
Talcott,  Dr.  Alvan,  199 
Tilley.  Abigail  (Melyen),  *204 

—  William.  204 
Winthrop,  Gov.  John,  200 


DESCENDANTS    OP    GEORGE   HUBBARD,   OP    MIDDL.ETOWN,   CT. 


Adams.  Maria  (Hubbard),  281 

—  Rufus,  281 

Andrews,  Hannah  (Kirby),  276 
Arnold,  Clarissa  (Hubbard),  289 

—  Joseph,  289 
Atkins,  Albert,  *302 

—  Anne  (Hubbard),  302 

—  Henry,  *302 

—  Ithamer,  31 12 

—  Jacob,  *3(i2 

—  Maria,  *302 

—  Martha  (Miller),  302 

—  Rhoda,  *3n2 

—  Richard,  *302 

—  Sarah,  *302 

—  Thomas,  302 

—  William  H.,  *302 

Atten  borough,  Eliza  Maria  (Hubbard), 
307 

—  Richard  Henry,  307 
Bacon,  Ann  (Harrison),  280 

—  Esther  (Hubbard).  276 

—  Joel,  280 

—  Lydia  (Hubbard).  280 

—  Nathaniel,  276,  280 
Badger.  Joseph,  282 

Ball.    Kate  Harriet  (Hubbard),   303, 
3(i4 

—  Thomas  N.,  304 
Barber,  Elizabeth.  *300 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  300 

—  Serepta,  *30o 

—  Thomas,  300 
Barker,  Harvey,  279 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  279 
Barrett,  Joseph.  292 

—  Mary  (Hubbard)  Evans,  292 


Bartlett,  Gershom,  278 

—  Lucretia  (Hubbard),  278 
Beaumont,  Bathsheba  (Hubbard),  289 

—  Edmund  Bray,  *289 

—  Flora  A.,  *289 

—  Hannah.  *2S9 

—  James.  289 

—  John  Booth,  *2-9 

—  Joseph,  289 

—  Mary  E.,  *289 
Beckley,  John,  294 

—  Mary  (Woodruff),  294 
Beer.  John  Hubbard,  *308 

—  Mary  Amelia  (Hubbard),  307,  308 

—  Richard,  308 
Belden,  Alvin,  306 

Bellam,  Eliza  Maria  (Hubbard)  Atten- 
borough,  3o7 

—  Thomas  Lloyd,  307 
Benham,  Ellen  (Rand),  *304 

—  Silas,  304 

Bevans,  Mary  (Hubbard;,  277 

—  Thomas,  277 
Bevins,  Arthur,  276 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  276 

—  Thomas,  276 
Bidwell.  Daniel,  2&3 

—  Lucy  Maria  (Hubbard),  288 
Bishop.  Mary,  270 

Blake,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  278 

—  Stephen,  27S 

Blood,  Benjamin  F.,  298,  412 

—  Laura  C.  (Hubbard)  Kendall,  298, 

442 
Brainerd,  Elisha,  301 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  284 

—  Herman,  2S9 


Brainerd,  John,  284 

—  Maria  (Hubbard),  289 

—  Martha  (Hubbard).  301 
Bron son,  Henry  H.,  300 

—  Julia  Josephene  (Hubbard),  300 

—  Mehetabie  (Hubbard),  2S1 

—  Sylvester,  2S1 

Brooks,     Antoinette     Almira     (Hub- 
bard),  289 

—  Charles,  *2s9 

—  David  C.  289 

—  Frank,  *2S9 

—  George,  *289 

—  James,  *289 

—  Marv,  *2S9 

—  Thomas,  *289 

Brown,  Betsey  (Hubbard),  295 

—  Chester  H  ,  300 

—  Eleanor  (Brown),  270 

—  Emeline  Jennie  (Hubbard),  300 

—  Nathaniel,  270 

—  Percv.  270 

—  Reuben  B..  295 
Buck.  Marv  (Kirby),  276 
Bump.  Adelaide,  288 

—  Eliza  (Hubbard),  288 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  287 

—  Nelson,  2n7 

—  Newton,  288 

—  Rosaline,  288 
Burr,  Abigail,  *276 

—  Abigail  (Hubbard),  276 

—  Benjamin,  286 

—  Damans  (Hubbard),  280 

—  Ebenezer,  *276 

—  Elizabeth,  *276 

—  Hannah,  *276 


472 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Burr,  Jonathan,  *270,  289 

—  Martha  (Hubbard),  286 

—  Mary,  *276 

—  Nathaniel,  *276 

—  Thankful,  *276 

Burrows,  Helen  (Hubbard),  301 

—  Wilbur, '301 

■Cadwell,  Hannah  (-  ?),  294 

—  Thomas,  2i»4 

Centre.  Agnes  (Hubbard),  291,  294 

—  Ebenezer,  294 

—  Joab,  291 

Chamberlin,     Catherine     (Hubbard), 
440 

—  Martin,  440 

—  Mary  Jane  (  Hubbard),  440 
Clark,   Adaline  Theresa   (Hitchcock), 

*442 

—  Elbert  C,  442 

—  Elisha,  289 

—  Julianna  (Hubbard),  289 
Clements,  Eleanor  (Watts)  Brown,  2T0 

—  Jasper,  £70 
Coe.  Ezra.  301 

—  Phebe  (Hubbard),  301 
Cole,  Mathew,  *29l) 

—  Ruth  (Hubbard),  290 
Coleman,  Amos,  303 

—  Ruth  (Kirbv),  303 
Collins,  Nathaniel,  271 
Cone,  Anna.  *2S4 

—  Caleb,  284 

—  Elisha,  *284 

—  Elizabeth  (— ?),  284 

—  Hannah,  *2"<4 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  284 

—  Mai  tha  (  Bates),  284 

—  Mary,  *284 

—  Silas,  *284 

Cook,  Edward  E.,  308 

—  Ellen  (Dodge),  *3U8 
Corn  well.  John,  277 

—  Mary  (—:).  -J75.  277 

—  Marv  (Pe  k),  277 

—  William,  875,  2T7 
Cotton,  Daniel.  279 

—  Ruth  (Hubbard).  279 
Ciampton,  Levi,  300 

—  Susannah  (  Hubbard),  284 
Crowell,  — ?  (Bidwell),  302 

—  Daniel,  302 

—  John,  302 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  307 
Cruttenden,  Susannah  (Kirby).  276 
Cutler,  Ann  Maria  (Smith),  442 

—  George.  442 

Dalton,    Frances    Cornelia     (Smith), 
♦308 

—  Thomas  Francis,  13C8 

—  Thomas  G.,  308 

—  Wilson  Strader,  t308 
Daugherty,  Elias,  *287 

—  Emily  Jane,  *287 

—  John,  287 

—  Julia  (Hubbard).  287 

—  Litchia  Louisa.  *287 
Davis.  Charles  Talcott,  30 i 

—  Grace  Louise  (Hubbard),  306 

—  Jacob,  299 

Day,  Edward  Warren,  *284 
Dean.  Isa  ic,  2->l 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard).  281 
Dieter,  Anderson  Devereux,  299 

—  Emma  Grant  (Hubbard),  299 
Doane,  Grace,  *304 

—  Kate  (Hubbard ),  304 

—  Mary   Kate    Elizabeth   (Hubbard), 

304 

—  William,  304 

—  William  A.,  304 

Dodge,  Caroline  (Hubbard),  308 

—  Ellen,  *3<i8 

—  Le  Roy,  308 


Drake,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  294 

—  Moses,  294 

Duran.l.  Alida  Helen  (Hubbard),  296 

—  Dexter  William,  *296 

—  Harold  Column,  *296 

—  Howard  W.,  29C. 

—  Jessie  Mary,  *296 

—  Stella  Maria,  *29i> 
Edwards,  Abigail  (— r),  291 

—  Churchill.  291 

—  Daniel.  291 

—  David,  '291 

—  Jemima  (Hubbard),  291 

—  Mary  (— ?),  291 
Elv.  Mary  (-?).  277 

—  Phebe  (Hubbard),  277 

—  Richard,  277 

Evans,  Mary  (Hubbard),  292 
Fargo,  Daniel.  284 

—  Egbert,  *284 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  2S4 
Ferree,  Augusta  (Hubbard),  301 

—  James,  301 

Field,  David  Dudley,  269 

Fielden,  Ada  Grant  (Gardner),  *442 

—  Andrew  Gardner.  t442 

—  Clarence  Barnard,  t442 

—  Elizabeth  (Scott),  442 

—  Joseph  F..  442 

—  Laura,    r442 

—  Margaret,  1442 

—  Paul.  t442 

—  Samuel,  442 

Fifield,  Hester  (Hubbard),  281 

—  Horace,  281 
Filley,  Anthony,  294 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  294 
Fiske,  Amos,  3(13 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  303 

Fitch,   Catherine    Maria    (Hubbard), 
308 

—  O.  H.,  308 

Fordham,  Esther  (Hubbard),  279 

—  William,  279 
Foster,  Edward,  275 

—  Henry,  278 

—  Hiram.  304 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  278 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  275 
Francis,  Joseph,  29*1 

—  Robert,  299 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  290 
Frink,  Asa.  291 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  291 
Gardner,  Ada  Grant,  *442 

—  Celia  Lull  (Hubbard),  298,  442 

—  Clarence,  *442 

—  Cora  (Cutler),  442 

—  Frederic  Winsor,  t442 

—  George  Frank,  *442 

—  George  Warren,  298,  442 

—  Guy  Hubbard.  *442 

—  Margaret,  t442 

—  Robert  Leland,  t4J2 

—  Samuel  Walker,  442 

—  Sophia  (Gre-lev).  442 

—  Walter  Cutler,  t442 
Garfield.  James  Abram,  30S 
Gilbert,  A.  L.,  287 

—  Emily  -lane  (Daughertv),  *287 
Gillett.  Abigail  (  Hubbard),  291 

—  Jonathan,  291 
Gillette,  Amos.  *299 

—  Clarissa,  *299 

—  Frances,  *299 

—  Submit  (Hubbard),  299 

—  Willi  m,  *^99 

Goodrich,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  300 

—  Charles.  *300 

—  Henry  C,  300 

—  Jane  Amelia.  *30o 

—  Jasper  H..  *::00 

Grant,  Adaline  C.  (Hubbard),  298,  442 


Grant,  Adaline  Hubbard,  *442 

—  James.  29s,  442 

—  Mary  Louisa,  *442 

—  Sarah  E.  (Hubbard).  442 
Green.  Adah  (Hubbard),  301 

—  Augusta,  *301 

—  Enoch,  301 

—  Kate,  *3(J1 
Griswold,  Gov..  807 

—  Ruth  Coleman  (Hubbard),  307 

—  Thomas,  3U7 
Guernsey,  Lemuel,  281 

—  Ruth  (Camp).  2sl 
Gurney,  John.  276 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  276 
Hall,  Esther  (Hubbard),  301 

—  John,  275,  301 

—  Phebe  (Hubbard),  302 

—  Seth  S.,  302 
Harsh,  Humphrey,  289 

—  Julia  Maria  (Hubbard)  Kibbee,  889 
Hastings.  Homer,  299 

—  Sarah  Marcia  (Hubbard),  299 
Hawley,  Hannah  (Hubbard),  299 

—  Sayles,  299 
Hayden,  David,  *302 

—  Edward.  *302 

—  Eliza,  *302 

—  Horatio,  *302 

—  Martha  (Hubbard),  302 

—  Thomas,  *302 

—  Uriah,  302 

Hazleton,  Rebecca  (— ?),  288 

—  Simon.  288 

Hewlett,  Fanny  (Hubbard),  298,  440 

—  Pearce,  298,  440 
Hinman,  Royal,  269 
Hitchcock.  Adaline  Theresa,  *442 

—  Albert  Cullen.  *442 

—  Cassie  Ada  (Wilbur),  442 

—  Celia  Gardner,  *442 

—  Cinthia  Hubbard,  *442 

—  Colman  Hubbard,  *442 

—  Fred  Allen,  *442 

—  George  Gardner,  *442 

—  James  Grant,  *J42 

—  Jared  B..  298,  442 

—  Jennie  (Stanley).  442 

—  Lucy  Moulton  "(Hubbard),  298,  442 

—  Mary  E.  (Hearn),  442 

—  Mary  S    (Noble),  442 

—  Minnie  ( — ?),  442 

—  Minnie  (Hasson),  442 

—  William  Henry,  *442 
Hooker,  Thomas,  270 
Hosmer,  George,  296 

—  Jacob,  29s 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  298 

—  Sarah  (Lnthrop),  296 
House,  Clarissa  (McKee),  299 

—  Robert,  299 
Hubbard.  Aaron,  2*6 

—  Abby  C.  (Fowler),  306 

—  Abel.  286 

—  Abigail,  276,  278,  2S1,  286,  291,  294, 

300 

—  Abigail  Adkins  (Ward),  277.  278. 

—  Abigail  (Butler),  2*1 

—  Abigail  (Deming).  290 

—  Abigail  (Dickinson).  280 

—  Abigail  (Francis),  299 

—  Abigail  (Titus).  287 

—  Abijah.  278.  291.  294,  300 

—  Abner.  278.  279,  2S6 

—  Abraham.  290 

—  Achsah,  280 

—  Achsah  (Beckley).  294,  300 

—  Ada  A..  282 

—  Adah,  301 

—  Adaline  C,  298,  442 

—  Adolphus.  388 

—  Adolphus  M..  282 

—  Agnes,  2S2,  284.  291,  294 


IXDEX. 


473 


Hubbard,     Agnes     (Spencer)     Hum 
phries,  291 ,  294 

—  Ahira,  442 

—  Albert.  4-40 

—  Albeit  Green,  287 

—  Albert  Tryon,  288 

—  Albert  Wallace,  800 

—  Alburn,  290 

—  Alethea,  300 

—  Alexander.  298 

—  Alfred,  282,  301 

—  Alfred  Brown,  2s4 

—  Alfred  H.,  284 

—  Alfred  T.,  2*3 

—  Algernon  L.,  282 

—  Alice,  288,  298 

—  Alice  (Mowbray).  304 

—  Alice  (Shaler).  266,  288 

—  Alicia  Cameron,  308 

—  Alida  Helen,  298 

—  Allen,  290,  440 

—  AlmiraT..  2S3 

—  Almira  T.  (Hubbard),  283 

—  Alvan.  294 

—  Amanda  J.  (Lester),  299 

—  Amasa,  2*6.  289 

■—  Amelia  Ann  (Hopkins),  307 
*-  Amos,  301,  303 

—  Amos  Coleman,  307 

—  Amos  Fiske,  308 

—  Amos  S.,  30S 

—  Am»  T..  284 

—  Amy.  286 

—  Andrew,  286 

—  Ann  E.,  288 

—  Ann  Eggleston,  299 

—  Ann  Eliza,  283 

—  Ann  M.  (Badger),  282 

—  Ann  Maria,  282 

—  Anna,  300,  301.  302 

—  Anna  (Crampton).  306 

—  Anna  Elizabeth,  283 

—  Anna  (Graham),  288 

—  Anna  K.  (Vaughn),  308 

—  Anna  M..  288 

—  Anna  (May).  299 

—  Anna  Mennda  (Parker),  287 

—  Anna  Sophia.  294,  306 

—  Anna  (Stowe).  301 

—  Annab.-I  M..  299 

—  Anne,  2S2,  2n6.  302 

—  Anne  (Clark  ),  288 

—  Anne  (Massey),  29s 

—  Anne  (Walkley),  286 

—  Anne  (Woodruff),  284 

—  Annie  B.,  282 

—  Ansel,  278,  281 

—  Anson,  294 

—  Antoinette.  2S6 

—  Antoinette  Almira,  2S9 

—  Archer  S.,  283 

—  Arthur.  288 

—  Arthur  M..  283 

—  Asa,  281.  282.  286,  294,  299,  300 

—  Asa  E.,  288,  289 

—  Asahel.  2S6,  292,  295 

—  Asher.  280 

—  Augusta.  301 

—  Augustus.  300,  301 

—  Bathsheba,  2*9 

—  Btthsheba  C— ?),  2S4 

—  Benjamin,  2s6,  292,  301 

—  Benoni.  299 

—  Bertha,  291 

—  Bessie,  299 

—  Bessie  (Holmes).  2S2 

—  Bessie  Maritta,  306 

—  Bessie  (Van  Winkle),  290 

—  Betsev.  295 

—  Betsey  ( Beckett),  440 

—  Betsey  ( Leonard),  290 

—  Bishop,  299 

—  Buckley,  308 


Hubbard.  Caleb,  277,  278 

—  Calvm.  278,  286 

—  Carlton  Spencer,  296 

—  Carolina   283 

—  Carolina  (Hubbard),  283 

—  Caroline,  301.  S  0* 

—  Caroline  E..  .'01 

—  Caroline  (Hubbard),  301 

—  Carrie.  283 

—  Catharine,  2*6.  288.  298,  308 

—  Catharine  (King).  29) 

—  Catharine  S..  308 

—  Catharine  S.  (Hubbard)  Logan,  308 

—  Catherine,  288,  140 

—  Catherine  Maria.  £08 

—  Catherine  (Meggatt).  291. 

—  Catherine    (Hulbert    or    Hurlbut), 

308 

—  Celestia  (Sage  i.  2-4 

—  Celia  Lull.  298.  442 

—  Charles,  283,  291,  298 

—  Charles  Asahel.  296 

—  Charles  Birdsev,  283 

—  Charles  Carroll",  2*2 

—  Charles  G.,  287 

—  Charles  Harvey,  282 

—  Charles  Jacob.  283 

—  Charles  .tared.  2*3 

—  Charles  M.,  304 

—  Charles  Paine,  300 

—  Charles  Silas,  267 

—  Charles  W.,  306 

—  Charlotte  (Crandall),  304 

—  Charlotte  E..  304 

—  Chester,  299,  300 

—  C'hloe.  294 

—  Chloe(  Williams).  288 

—  Cinthia  (Smith),  295 

—  Clara.  282.  304 

—  Clara  A  .  266 

—  Clarency,  286 

—  Clarilla,  279 

—  Clarissa,  281,  282.  2*9.  440 

—  Clarissa  A.  (Rice),  298,  442 

—  Clarissa  E..  288 

—  Clarissa  Elizabeth  (House),  299 

—  Clarissa  (Norton  i.  288 

—  Clarissa  R.,  298,  440 

—  Clark,  286 

—  Colman  Smith,  296 

—  Content  (Guernsey),  281 

—  Cornelia,  2S1,  301 

—  Cornelia  E.,  303 

—  Cornelia  Frances,  308 

—  Cornelia  Sabin.  307 

—  Cullen,  298.  442 

—  Cynthia  (Bonfoey),  290 

—  Cyrus,  286,  291 

—  Daisy.  287 

—  Damaris,  289 

—  Damaris  (Walkley).  266 

—  Dana,  286 

—  Daniel,  274,  275.  276.  277.  278,  279, 

2*0,  2*4.  2*6.  289.  290,  302,  304 

—  Daniel  Bidwell,  283 

—  Daniel  C.  303 

—  Darius,  286 

—  David,  286,  289.  301.  302 

—  Debby.  286 

—  Deborah  (Coates),  2*9 

—  Deidamia.  294 

—  Delia  S.  (Birdsev),  2S3 

—  Delilah  (Mitchell).  284 

—  Diochet.  2S6 

—  Dolly,  286,  294 

—  Dolly  (Cole),  294 

—  Dominick.  288 

—  Dorothy,  286.  294 

—  Dosethius,  294 

—  Douglas,  269,  279,  294 

—  Kben,  286 

—  Ebenezer.  269.  272,  276,  291,  301 

—  E*benezer  Guernsey,  281 


Hubbard,  Ebenezer  Prout,  306 

—  Edith,  282,  29,1 

—  Edith  (Woodward),  278 

—  Edmund,  286 

—  Edward,  266.  267.  29s 

—  Edward  Buckley.  308 

—  Edward  Stiles.  298 

—  Edward  Welles.  308 

—  Edwin,  269.  279,  300,  301 

—  Edwin  S.,  263 

—  Elanson.  286 

—  Eldad.  292 

—  Eleanor.  290,  299 

—  Eleanor  (Gold),  298 

—  Electa,  287 

—  Electa  (Bronson).  289 

—  Eli,  26H.  266 

—  Elias.  281,  287 

—  Elihu.  278,  279,  281 

—  Elijah,  279.  260,  281,  286,  291,  301, 

306 

—  Elijah  Kent,  2S0 

—  Eli>ha.  2*3.  292.  302,  '03 

—  Elisha  Sear*.  288 

—  Eliza,  287,  288.  298,  308 

—  Eliza  Ann  (Smith).  281 

—  Eliza  Bionson.  289 

—  Eliza  Maria,  307 

—  Eliza  Maria  (Rees),  307 

—  Eliza  (Tavlor),  308 

—  Elizabeth,   274.   275,  276,  277,  278, 

279.  281,   2*4.  286,  287,  269.  290, 
291.  292.  300,  301 

—  Elizabeth  (— ?).  291.  292 

—  Elizabeth  Ann  (Arnold).  283 

—  Elizabeth  (Burr),  269 

—  Elizabeth  (Case),  279 

—  El  zabeth  Clark,  308 

—  Elizabeth  (De  Koven),  281 

—  Elizabeth  (Dominick),  287 

—  Elizabeth  Hall,  275 

—  Elizabeth  (Lee).  292 

—  Elizabeth  (Meigs).  :,03.  304 

—  Elizabeth  (— ?)  Jliller,  ^78 

—  Elizabeth  (Posson),  267 

—  Elizabeth  R.,  304 

—  Elizabeth  (Roberts).  288 

—  Elizabeth  S..  308 

—  Elizabeth  S.  (Hubbard).  308 

—  Elizabeth  (Sill),  27*,  260 

—  Elizabeth  Sill,  281 

—  Elizabeth  (Sisson).  299 

—  Elizabeth  (Snow).  284,  269 

—  Elizabeth  (Stowe).  301,  303 

—  Elizabeth  (Watts),  270 

—  Ellen,  279,  291,  304,  308 

—  Ellen  Maria.  283 

—  Elliott,  264 

—  Elvira  (Cooley),  279 

—  Emeline,  300 

—  Emeline  Jennie,  300 

—  Emeline  S.  (Folsom),  283 

—  Emer-on,  279 

—  Kmilv.  284,  290,  292,294 

—  Emily  (Bird),  287 

—  Emily  (Burritt),  292 

—  Emily  C.  (Preston),  304 

—  Emma  Grant,  299 

—  Emma  (Lindlev),  279 

—  Emma  M..  306 

—  Ephraim.  301 

—  Erastus,  299,  300 

—  Ernest,  290 

—  Ernest  Birdsev.  2*3 

—  Esther,  276,  279,  286,  301 

—  Esther  (Foster).  279 

—  Esther  (Starr).  279 

—  Esther  Stowe,  275 

—  Esther  (Tibbetts)?  286 

—  Ethel  M..  2*3 

—  Eunice  (— ':).  290 

—  Eunice  A.,  2*4 

—  Eunice  (Chapin),  283 


474 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Hubbard,  Eunice  (Clark),  286 

—  Eunice  (Front),  304 

—  Eunice  (Ward),  301 

—  Evaline.  287 

—  Evaline  (Vandyck).  287 
_  p.  c.  (— ?)  Dalton,  303 

—  F.  Sherwood,  2S3 

—  Fannie,  288,  289 

—  Fanny.  2S4,  287,  291,  298,  440 

—  Fanny  A  .  30ti 

—  Finny  (Burbank),  300 

—  Fanny  (Johnson),  281 

—  Fanny  M  .  300 

—  Fidelia,  281,  308 

—  Fidelia  (C-?),  298 

—  Flavia,  294 

—  Flora,  288 

—  Flora  Elmira,  289 

—  Flora  (Hazleton),  288,  289 

—  Flora  Jennett,  289 

—  Florence,  290.  298 

—  Florence  Delia,  28'! 

—  Frances  Cornelia  (Smith)  Dalton. 

*308 

—  Frances  D.,  283 

—  Frances  Delia,  283 

—  Frances  E.  (Dickinson),  282 

—  Frances  (Fairchild),  281 

—  Frances  Julia  (Reed),  287 

—  Frances  (Restell),  291 

—  Francis,  281 

—  Frank.  290,  301 

—  Frank  Watson,  299 

—  Franklin,  298,  299 

—  Fred  Perrv,  282 

—  Fred  W.,  283 

—  Frederic  Goodwin.  283 

—  Frederick,  279,  289,  290,  292,  294, 

301 

—  Freeman.  299 

—  Gaston  Tracy,  282 

—  Gaston  Trvon,  282,  301 

—  George.  209,  274,  275,  276,  277,  278, 

279.  SSI,  2S2,  2SS,  289,  290,  292, 
298.  299,  300,  301,  304,  440 

—  George  Arnold  283 

—  George  Clark.  308 

—  George  David  Read,  296 

—  George  Nelson,  283 

—  George  M.,  282 

—  George  R.,  304 

—  George  Stocking,  281,  233 

—  George  W.,  306 

—  George  Watson.  298,  299 

—  Georgene  (Story),  300 

—  Georgianna,  298 

—  Gertrude  A.,  283 

—  Gideon.  290 

—  Grace  D..  283 

—  Grace  Louise.  306 

—  Gurtavus  A.,  300 

—  Guy  Homer,  298,  445 

—  Hadassah,  2M> 

—  Hannah.    276.  277.   278,   279,   280, 

282,  2S4.  286,  287,  289.  291,  292, 
294,  3011,  301 

—  Hannah  C.  2s2 

—  Hannah  (Cad well).  294,  298 

—  Hannah  (Clark),  286 

—  H   nimh  (Filley),  294 

—  Humah  Frances,  287 

—  Hannah  (  Hubbard),  286,  289 

—  Hannah  (Kent).  280 

—  Hmnah  (Paine).  282.  283 

—  Hannah  (Walker).  2S4 

—  Hannah  (Wetmore),  301 

—  Hmnah  (Willard),  280 

—  Harlan  Page.  296,  35»,  405 

—  Harlev.  284 

—  H  nlow.  291 

—  Harriet.  279.  286,  294,  298,  302,  307 

—  Harriet  Ellen,  306 

—  Harriet  (Hubbard),  302 


Hubbard.  Harriet  J.,  2S8 

—  Harriet  (Kirkofr).  298 

—  Harriet  Strong.  283 

—  Harriett.  299 

—  Harry  Heath,  3  Hi 

—  Harvey.  294.  295,  300 

—  Hector,  294 

—  Helen.  299,  301 

—  Helen  (Brown),  294 

—  Helen  Louisa,  300 

—  Helen  Maria,  283 

—  Helen  (Valentine),  290 

—  Helen  (Wheelock).  288 

—  Heman,  288,  291 

—  Henrietta,  279 

—  Henry,  279.  292,  299,  302 

—  Henry  Francis.  299 

—  Henry  Griswold,  281 

—  Henry  Marvin.  283 

—  Henry  S.,  283 

—  Henry  T..  308 

—  Henry  Townsend,  303 

—  Hepsibah  (Smith).  2>6 

—  Hepzebah,  277.  286 

—  Herbert  R.,  304 

—  Hester,  281 

—  Hezekiah,  278,  279,  301 

—  Hiram,  279,  280,  291,301 

—  Honore  Chadbourn,  287 

—  Hope,  301 

—  Horace,  301 

—  Howard  A.,  284 

—  Huldah,  279 

—  Huldah  (Bailey).  286 

—  Huldah  (Crowell).  301 

—  Huldah  (Galpin),  300 

—  Ida,  279 

—  IdaE.  (Peden),  282 

—  Ida  May  (Chaffee),  301 

—  Imer  (or  "Immer"),  280 

—  Ira,  287.  291 

—  Isaac.  291,  301,  302,  303,306,  30S 

—  Isaac  George,  304 

—  Isaac  Watts.  298,  440 

—  Israel,  2S6.  287 

—  J.  E.  Dow,  288 

—  Jabez,  301 

—  Jacob,  275.  283,  802 

—  James.  2S0.  -.'88,  294 

—  James  E..  288 

—  Jane,  281.  290.  294,  298 

—  Jane  (Badger),  281 

—  Jane(Higbee).  291 

—  Jane  (Hough),  281 

—  Jane  (Livingston),  298 

—  Jane  Louise.  289 

—  Janet,  279 

—  Jeanuette.  299 

—  Jedediah,  2^7.  3(11 

—  Jemima.  278.  289,  291,  301 

—  Jennie.  289 

—  Jennie  Doane  (Galpin).  300 

—  Jeremiah.   284,   2S6,  288,  289,  298, 

301,  303,  304.  440 

—  Jeremiah  Warren,  306 

—  Jerusha.  280,  289 

—  Jerusha  (Rnsign),  291 

—  Jerusha  (Morley),  280 

—  Jesse,  281,286 

—  Joab    294.  298 

—  Joab  Hiram.  298 

—  Joanna  (Judd).  291 

—  Job,  286 

—  Joel.  284,  2S(i 

—  Joel  Bacon,  284 

—  Johanna  (Judd),  294 

—  John,  275.  270.  278,  280,  282,  283, 

286,  291,  292,  294,  298,  301,  303, 
304,  30s 

—  John  C,  30S 

—  John  Coleman.  308 

—  John  Earle,  301 

—  John  Erastus,  300 


Hubbard,  John  Flavel,  294 

—  John  H..  288 

—  John  Harvey.  282 

—  John  Jay,  283 

—  John  Marshall.  2^1 

—  John  Matthew.  307 

—  John  Mills,  29S 

—  John  Niles,  279 

—  John  Paine,  282 

—  Jonathan,  279,  2S6.  290.  292.  301 

—  Joseph,  271,  274,  275.  276,  277.  278, 

286,  302 

—  Joseph  Grant,  288 

—  Josiah,  282,  2s3,  301,  306 

—  Josiah  Meigs,  302,  303 

—  Judd  Imer  (or  "  Judimer"),  £80 

—  Judith.  286 

—  Julia,  286,  2S7.  288,  292,  299,  300 

—  Julia  A.,  288 

—  Julia  Ann  (Paddock),  282,  301 

—  Julia  (Dickinson),  2S6 

—  Julia  Granville  (Jewett),  299 

—  Julia  Josephine,  299,  300 

—  Julia  K.,  308 

—  Julia  Maria,  289 

—  Julia  P..  283 

—  Julia  (Porter),  292 

—  Julianna,  289 

—  Justus.  287 

—  Kate,  304 

—  Kate  Eliza.  308 

—  Kate  Eliza  (Hubbard),  308 

—  Kate  Harriet,  303 

—  Katharine,  292 

—  Katharine  (  Roberts),  292 

—  Katherine  (Toomey),  283 

—  Langdon  C,  281 

—  Langdon  Watson,  299 

—  Laura,  280,  294,  29s,  302,  440 

—  Laura  0.,  298,  442 

—  Laura  (Hubbard),  2*0 

—  Laura  Maria,  442 

—  Laura  (Olds),  282 

—  Lemuel,  292 

—  Le  Roy,  283 

—  Lessie  (Herring),  282 

—  Lester.  298 

—  Lester  Samuel.  298 

—  Letitia  (Beckley),  290 

—  Lettie.  290 

—  Levi.  291 

—  Lewis.  284 

—  Lillian  Frances,  283 

—  Linus,  279 

—  Livingston,  298 

—  Lizzie,  280 

—  Lizzie  R.,  3C6 

—  Lois,  291,  292 

—  Lois  (Corey).  295 

—  Lorenzo,  287 

—  Louis  B.,  282 

—  Louis  De  Koven.  281 

—  Louisa,  284,287 

—  Louisa  (Frink).  291 

—  Louise,  280 

—  Louise  (Newell),  302 

—  Lucella,  279 

—  Lucia  Hyde.  288 

—  Lncinda,  280 

—  Lucius,  298 

—  Lucius  Francis.  298 

—  Lncretia,  278.  283 

—  Lncretia  (Bidwell),  283 

—  Lncretia  (Bridges).  290 

—  Lucy.  279.  292.  298,  302,  442 

—  Lne'v  (Davis).  299 

—  Lucy  ( Hubbard  s  279,  302 

—  Lucy  J..  2.S8 

—  Lucy  (Johnson),  301 

—  Lncv  (Ivelsev),  28(1 

—  Lucy  (Kirby),  289 

—  Lucy  (Lyman),  281 

—  Lucy  Lyman,  302,  303 


INDEX. 


475 


Hubbard,  Lucy  Maria,  283 

—  Lucy  Moulton,  298,  442 

—  Lucy  (Savage),  292 

—  Lucy  (Strong),  279 

—  Lydia.  280,  2b8,  284,  291,  292,  301 

—  Lydia  (— ?),  202 

—  Lydia  (Brewster).  298 

—  Lydia  (Judd),  280.  282 

—  Lydia  (Mather),  2*0,  281 

—  Lydia  (Wetmore),  801 

—  Lydia  (Wright),  '292 

—  Lyman  Hail.  2*7 

—  Mabd  (Kelsey),  291 

—  Mablc  (Barnard),  298 

—  Margaret,  275,  279,  298 

—  Margaret  (Kelsey),  301 

—  Margaret  |  Norton),  291 
--  Maigaret  (Shuinaker),  298 

—  Margeret  Bill,  281 

—  Margerie,  299 

—  Margery,  286 

—  .Maria,  281,  289,  301 

—  Maria  (Brainerd),  280 

—  Maria  E..  282.  301 

—  Maria  E.  (.Hubbard).  282,  301 

—  Maria  (Hubbard)  Brainerd,  289 

—  .Maria  Mabel.  298 

—  Marie  Louisa.  283 

—  Marietta  (Kelsey).  279 

—  Manila.  299 

—  Maritta  Harriet  (Heath).  300 

—  Martha,  277,  284,  280,  290.  301,  302 

—  Martha.  Louise,  3(12,  308 

—  Martha  (Peck).  290.  291 

—  Martha  (Robert*).  3112.  303 

—  Marv,  274.  275,  270,  277,  27S,  279, 

280,  281.  282.   2-4.   286.  238.291, 
292.  294,  298.  301,  302.  303,  307 

—  Mary  (— ?),  278 

—  Mary  A.,  288 

—  Mary  A.  (  Blossom),  282 

—  Mary  Amelia,  307 

—  Mary  Anna,  302,  303 

—  Marv  (Bishop).  27o 

—  Mary  U.,  282,  288 

—  Mary  (Cadwell),  294.  299 

—  Mary  (Clark).  275.  284 

—  M  iry  (Corn well),  277 

—  Mary  D.  (Townsend),  303 

—  Marv  (Dexter),  280 

—  Mary  E.  (Atwood).  2S8 

—  Mary  (Earle).  276,  300 

—  Marv  Elizabeth.  307 

—  Mary  (Fish).  290 

—  Mary  G.,  803 

—  Mary  Hattie,  283 

—  Mary  (Hough  i,  280 

—  Mary  (Hustaee),  290 

—  Marv  Jane.  440 

—  Marv  Kate  Elizabeth.  304 

—  Mary  L..  306 

—  Marv  Lucretia,  298 

—  Mary  (Phillips),  278,  280 

—  Mary  Platts  (Read).  296 

—  Mary  (Porter),  275.  277 

—  Mary  (Robburds).  279 

—  Mary  (Roberts),  278,  279,  281 

—  Mary  (Sabin),  307 

—  Mary  (Sears),  301 

—  Mary  fShaler)  1  286 

—  Mary  (Shattuck).  295,  440 

—  Marv  (Smith ).  290 

—  Mary  (Stanley),  292,  295 

—  Mary  (Stocking)  281,  282 

—  Mary  Stocking,  283 

—  Mary  (Strong),  279 

—  Marv  (Van  Campen),  279 

—  Marv  Webster.  282 

—  Marv  (Wells)  ?  286 

—  Marv  (Willard),  302,  306 

—  Mathew,  302,  303 

—  Mathew  L..  308 

—  Matthew,  286,  289,  303,  306 


'  Hubbard,  Matthew  Hopkins.  307 
-    —  Mattie.  286 

—  May  L.,  S06 

—  Mehetahle,  281 

—  Mehetable  Brown.  288 

—  Mehitable,  275,  277   279 

—  Mehitable  (Miller),  277,  279,  281 

—  Mehitable  (Turner),  279 

—  Melinda,  282.  286 

—  Mercy,  290 

—  Mercy  Anne,  282 

—  Mercy  (Seymour),  290,  292 

—  Mica,  277 

—  Micah.  279.  281 

—  Michael.  286 

—  Miles  Claudius,  298 

—  Mira,  284 

—  Miranda.  282 

—  Miriam,  283,  280 

—  Moses.  280.  287,  291 

—  Myra  Emetine,  283 

—  Myra  (Nickerson),  306 

—  Myra  Trvon,  283 

—  Nancy.  287,  298.  299,  440 

—  Nancy  (Coe).  2S1 

—  Nancy  (Hubbard),  298,  440 

—  Naomi  (  Havden).  278 

—  Nathan,  278.  280,  282 

—  Nathaniel.  274.   276.   280,  291,  294, 

299,  300,  301,  802,  803 

—  Nehemiah,   279,  301.   302,  303,  304, 

300,  307 

—  Nellie  B..  283 

—  Nelson  Kugene,  296 

—  Noadiah.  301 

—  Oliver.  294,  298.  440    -J 

—  Oliver  Cromwell.  283 

—  Oliver  Kellogg,  294 

—  Orrin.  294 

—  Otis,  292 

—  Ozias,  292 

—  Pamelia  Roxanna,  298 

—  Parnell,  301 

—  Parsons,  302 

—  Pascal,  281 

—  Paul.  287 

—  Phebe.  277,  278.  281,  301,  302 

—  Phebe  (Fairchild;  Crowell,  301 

—  Phebe  (Griffith).  277 

—  Phebe  (Hatch),  291 

—  Philip  L..  283 

—  Phineas,  295,  440 

—  Phoebe.  287 

—  Pollv,.282,  295 

—  Polly  (Clark),  291 

—  Polly  (Sears),  281 

—  Priscilla,2Sl 

—  Prudence,  2S6 

—  Prudence  (Chapman),  278 

—  Prudence  (Lee),  292 

—  Rachel.  299 

—  Ralph,  289 

—  Rebecca,  281,  302 

—  Rebecca  (Bates).  286 

—  Rebecca  (Hedge  ).   281 

—  Reuben.  286 

—  Rheua  (— ?).  21) 

—  Rhoda.  286.  291   292,  301 

—  Rhoda  (Cole).  292 

—  Rhoda  (Graham).  279 

—  Rhoda  (Sprasue).  2*7 

—  Richard     274.   270.   277.    278,    279, 

286.  288.  2911,  292,  302 

—  Richard  Langdon.  299 

—  Robert,  275,  277.  278,  279,  280,  298, 

302,  303 

—  Robert  H.,  282 

—  Robert  Paddock,  301 

—  Roger.  299,  300 

—  Rollin.  298 

—  Rollin   Barnard,   298 

—  Roa,  283 

—  Rosauna.  280,  291 


Hubbard,  Ruah,  286 

—  RufUS,  288 

—  Rufns  Harlow,  282 

—  Ruth,   279,  281,  287,290.291,299, 

301,  303 

—  Ruth  (Bill),  302 

—  Ruth  (Brown),  298 

—  Ruth  (Centre),  279 

—  Ruth  (Coleman).  803,  306 

—  Ruth  Coleman,  :.07 

—  Ruth  (Scovil),  286 

—  Ruth  (Southard).  808 

—  Ruth  (Susan),  299 

—  Sabin,  307 

—  Sally,  283,  280 

—  Sally  (Sears).  282 

—  Samuel,  270.  274.  275,  276,  279,280, 

2*1,  286,  2S9,  290,  291,  294,  301, 

302,  304 

—  Samuel  Birdsey,  283 

—  Samuel  Boardman,  2S9 

—  Samuel  C,  283 

—  Samuel  Dickinson,  280 

—  Sara,  269 

—  Sarah,  275,  276.  279,  280,  281,  282, 

284,  286.   288,  289,   290.  291,  292, 
294.  295,  298,  299,  301,  302,  307 

—  Sarah  Ann  (Tryonj,  282 

—  Sarah  (Bailev),  286 

—  Sarah  (Beckley),  292 

—  Sarah  (Boardman).  289 

—  Sarah  (Cole),  279 

—  Sarah  (Cornwell),  275,  277 

—  Sarah  E.,442 

—  Sarah  (Gillette),  299,  300 

—  Sarah  (Hall),  302 

—  Sarah  (Hobbvi.  302 

—  Sarah  (Holcomb).  299 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard).  301 

—  Sarah  (.Johnson).  300.  302 

—  Sarah  (Kirbv).  290.  295 

—  Sarah  M.  (Davis).  281 

—  Sarah  Marcia.  299 

—  Sarah  Maria  (Hosmer)  Hawkes,  296 

—  Sarah  (Phelp>i.  294 

—  Sarah  Phelps.  298 

—  Sarah  Bobbins.  308 

—  Sarah  Sears,  283 

—  Sarah  (Sill).  279,  302,  303 

—  Sarah  Sill,  302,  303 

—  Sarah  Sdl  (Hubbard),  302,  303 

—  Sarah  (Smith),  286 

—  Sarah  (Sonihumyd).  279 

—  Sarah  T„  283 

—  Sarah  T.  (Hubbard).  283 

—  Sarah  (Thomas),  286 

—  Sarah  (Walkley).  284 

—  Sarah  (Wilcox),  3o6 

—  Seidell.  279 

—  Senath,  286 

—  Serena  (—V),  442 

—  Seth.  277 

—  Seth  Shinier,  283 

—  Shaler.  280 

—  Shannon. 29s 

—  Sherman.  299 

—  Sherman  B. .  302 

—  Sidney  <'.,  283 

—  Silas.  287 

—  Silvia.  294 

—  Simeon.  286 

—  Simeon  Edwards,  294 

—  Simon,  288 

—  Smith,  286 

—  Snowden.  2S8 

—  Socrates,  288 

—  Solomer.  282 

—  Solomon.  282,  286.  287 

—  Sophia  (Belden),  3(l6 

—  Sophia  (— ?)  Green.  287 

—  Sophie    Snowden),  2n8 

—  Stephen.  301 

—  Submit,  286,  299.  301 


476 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND    GENEALOGY 


Hubbard,  Submit  (Bishop),  299 

—  Susan,  279,  a91 

—  Susan  K.,  -m-i 

—  Susan  E.  (Mosely).  282 

—  Susan  Viuturine,  299 

—  Susan  (Watts),  5te6 

—  Susannah,  284.  286,  288 

—  Susannah  (Bailey).  2s4 

—  Susannah  (Corey).  292 

—  Susannah  Hosm  r,  300 

—  Susannah  Jennett.  289 

—  Susannah  (Mills).  298 

—  Susannah  (—:)  Mux-hell,  301 

—  Susannah  (Roberts),  278 

—  Sybil.  286 

—  Sylvester.  281.  2:6.  291,  292 

—  Temperance,  2  6 

—  Temperance  (Shaler),  2s4 

—  Thankful.  276,  280,  283,  290 

—  Thankful  (I'lark).  286 

—  Th  inkful  (Johnson),  277 

—  Theodore.  294 

—  Theophilus.  282 

—  Thomas,  269.  275,  276, 277,  284,  2S9, 

290,  291 

—  Thomas  Hill.  281 

—  Thomas  Jefferson,  294 

—  Thomas  L..  2S2 

—  Thomas  Rowland,  283 

—  Thomas  Scrunton,  289 

—  Timothy.  5:86,  290.  294.  299,  200 

—  Timothy  Jewett,  299 

—  Titus,  3  ll 

—  Trumbull.  294 

—  Van  Dyck,  287 

—  Victorine  A.,  288 

—  Walter,  2811.  288,  290,  306 

—  Walter  B..  2"2 

—  Walter  Bulklev,  306 

—  Walter  Coleman,  308 

—  Waller  Raleigh,  283 

—  Ward,  301 

—  Wirren  Herbert,  304 

—  Watts,  276.  290,  292,  295 

—  Wealthy,  294 

—  Wealthy  ("Smith),  286 

—  Wilbur,  282 

—  William.   269,   275.    279.   280,    287, 

289.  2H0.  291,  298,  303,  308 

—  William  Amos,  307 

—  William  B.,  281 

—  William  Buckley.  308 

—  William  Fairohild,  308 

—  William  Francis,  308 

—  William  G.,  282 

—  William  Henry,  2S3,  298,  440 

—  Willie,  288 

—  Willie  G.  288 

—  Zadock,  281 

—  Zenas,  291 

—  Zeriah.  289 

—  Zerunah  (--»),  286 

—  Zilpha.  286 
Hulbert,  Abijah,  286 

—  Catherine  (— ?),  308 

—  Submit  (  Hubbard),  286 

—  Thomas,  80S 

Hull.  Electa  (Hubbard),  2S7 

—  Ira,  287 

Humphries,  Nathaniel,  291 
Hurlbut,  Agathus,  295 

—  Catherine  (— ?).  30> 

—  Raphael,  292,  295 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  292,  295 

—  Thomas,  308 
Jewett.  Nathan.  299 

Johnson,   Elizabeth    Sill    (Hubbard), 
281 

—  John  D.,  281 
Judd,  Alfred,  *284 

—  Ardon,  284 

—  Benjamin,  291 

—  Byron,  *284 


Judd,  Nathaniel,  280 

—  Sarah  (  Hubbard),  284 

—  Sarah  Jane,  *284 

—  Susannah  (North),  291 

—  Wallace.  *284 

Kellogg,  Fanny  M.  (Hubbard),  300 

—  Martin  M.,  300 
Kelsey,  Ezra,  289 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  289 
Kendall.  Ada  H.,  *442 

—  A.lahne,  *442 

—  Fred,  *442 

—  Laura  C.  (Hubbard).  29S,  442 

—  Laura  M.,  *442 

—  Lucy  Ellen,  *442 

—  Nicanor,  295,  29s,  440 
Kent.  John,  280 

Kerr,  John  D.,  282 

—  Susan  E.  (Hubbard),  282 
Kibbee,  Alice.  *289 

—  James  H.,  2&9 

—  Jane  L  uise  (Hubbard),  2S9 

—  Jennie.  *289 

—  John,  *2S9 

—  John  L. .  289 

—  Julia  Maria  (Hubbard),  2s9 

—  Lizzie,  *iS9 
Kirby,  Abigail,  276 

—  Bethia,  276 

—  Elizabeth  (Randall?),  276 

—  Ephraim,  291 

—  Esther,  276 

—  Hannah,  276 

—  John,  276 

—  Joseph.  276 

—  Ma  rv,  276 

—  Ruth  (Marvin),  291 

—  Sarah,  276 

—  Susannah,  276 

Larkin,   Hannah  Frances  (Hubbard), 
287 

—  James  D..  2S7 

Lawson,  Mary  (Hubbard),  301 
Lee,  Isaac,  276 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  276 
Logan,  Caroline,  *30S 

—  Catharine.  *308 

—  Catharine  S.  (Hubbard),  308      * 

—  Cornelia.  *308 

—  John  Hubbard,  *308 

—  Linus.  308 

—  Margerer.  *308 

Loomis,  Deidamia  (Hubbard),  294 

—  Jacob  2H4 

Luce.  Priscilla  (Hubbard),  281 

—  Sears,  281 
Lyon,  Carrv.  1 2S7 

—  Charles  Gilbert.  1287 

—  Emma  Louise,  t287 

—  Kva.  t2S7 

—  Florence,  t2S7 

—  Henry  Lloyd.  t2S7 

—  James  8.,  2S7 

—  Litchia  Louisa  (Daugherty),  *287 

—  William  Workman,  +287 
Marsh.  Abigail  (Hubbard),  2S1 

—  Timothy.  2M 

Mather,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  281 

—  Lois  (Griswold),  280 

—  Samuel.  28(1 

—  Thomas.  281 

Medcalf.  Anna  Sophia  (Hubbard),  294 

—  Edward,  294 
Meius,  Josiah.  303 
Merriam,  Edgar,  *289 

—  Frank,  *2S9 

—  Jane.  *289 

—  Lauren,  *2S9 

—  Lauren  T.,  2S9 

—  Susannah  Jennett  (Hubbard),  289 
Merriman,  Alfred,  *284 

—  Anson,  284 

—  Fanny  (Hubbard),  284 


Merriman,  Josiah,  *284 

—  Julia.  »2>4 

—  Lucetta,  »284 

—  Lydia.  *284 
Miller,  Andrew  D.,  2S3 

—  Arthur  Birdsey,  *i83 

—  Ellen  Maria  (Hubbard).  283 

—  Ernest  David,  *283 

—  Frances  Delia  (Hubbard),  283 

—  Herbert  William,  *283 

—  Miiton  H  ,  283 

—  Miriam  Huntley,  *283 

—  Sarah  (Nettleton),  277 

—  Thomas,  277 
Mills,  Joseph.  2s9 

—  Zeriah  (Hubbard).  259 
Morgan,  Lady  Elizabeth,  27o 

—  Sir  John,  27o 

Morris.  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  279 

—  James,  279 

Mosely,  Johnathan  W.,  282 
Hunger,  Ebenezer,  284 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  284 
Nearing,  Carrie  A.,  *306 

—  Charles  H.,  *306 

—  Fanny  A.  (Hubbard),  306 

—  Harry  J.,  *306 

—  Henry,  306 
-John  J.,  *306 

Nellis.  Margery  (Hubbard),  286 
Norwood,  Cornelia,  *i87 

—  Klecta,  *287 

—  Emma  (Smith),  *2s8 

—  Emory.  *287 

-  Francis,  287,  288 

—  Hiram.  *287 

—  Hubbard,  *287 

—  Irving,  *287 

—  Nancy,  *2S7 

—  Phoebe  (Hubbard),  2s7 
Nott,  Emma  M.  (Hubbard),  306 

—  William  E.,  306 
Nye,  A  Ian  son,  281 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  2sl 

Oswalt,  Mary  Lticretia  (Hubbard),  298 

—  Samuel,  298 
Falmer,  Ezekiel.  294 

—  Hannah  (Oadwell)  Hubbard,  294 

—  Jehie',  294 

—  Jonathan.  294 

Parker,   Clarissa  R.  (Hubbard)   Swal- 
low. 298.  440 

—  John,  298,  440 
Parmlee,  John,  284 

—  Marv  (Hubbard),  284 
Peck.  Elieziir,  290 

—  Paul.  277 

Perry,  Nancy  (Hubbard),  299 
Peters,  John  SI.,  288 

—  Julia  (Smith),  *2s8 
Pettee,  Laura  (  Hubbard).  440 

—  William,  440 

Phillips.  Anna  (Hubbard),  302 

—  Augustus  302 

Poolev.  Cornelia  E.  (Hubbard),  303 

—  George.  303 
Porter,  Abijah,  295 

—  Daniel,  275 

—  Elijah,  292 

—  John,  298 

—  Laura  (Hubbard),  298 

—  Noah,  275 

—  Robert,  275 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard)  Hurlbut,  495 
Pratt,  John,  302 

Prior,  George.  *2S3 

—  Josiah.  283 

—  Maria  Elizabeth,  *288 

—  Mary  Charlotte,  *283 

—  Sally  (Hubbard).  283 

—  Sarah.  *283 
Prout,  Ebenezer,  301 
Putnam,  Benjamin  D.,  306 


INDEX. 


477 


Putnam,  May  L.  (Hubbard).  306 
Ran  1,  Elizabeth  R.  (Hubbard),  304 

—  Ellen.  *3U4 

—  Emma,  1304 

—  Emma  (Hamlin),  304 

—  Helen,  t304 

—  John.  t304 

—  Maria  (  FoBter).  304 

—  Mary,  *+304.  :;06 

—  Philip  C.  *:,0i 

—  Richard.  t304 

—  Robert,  *304 

—  Robert  P..  304 

—  Sophia,  t804 
Ranney,  Comfort,  28!) 

—  Elizabeth,  *274 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  289 

—  Esther,  *274 

—  Hannah  (Turner),  271 

—  John.  *274 

—  Joseph.  *271 

—  Mary,  *274 

—  Mary  (Hubbardi.  274 

—  Mary  (Starr),  274 

—  Rebecca  (Willett),  274 

—  Thomas,  *274 
Read,  David,  200 

—  Hannah  (Spencer),  296 
Rees,  Harriet,  3n7 

—  Henry  J..  307 

—  Mary,  307 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),   307 

—  Thomas  Matthew,  307 
Roberts,  Abijah,  2M 

—  Aimer,  283 

—  Addie  Mary,  *283 

—  Alfred.  2S3 

—  Charles  Edgar,  *2S3 

—  Edward  Hubbard,  +302 

—  Elijah,  302,  :.07 

—  Elijah  Hubbard,  *302 

—  Elizabeth  Cooper,  +302 

—  Ellen  Cornelia,  1302 

—  Ellen  Maria. 

—  Emily  Matilda  (Pratt),  302 

—  Emma  Mary.  *283 

—  Eugene  Francis.  *283 

—  Fidelia  (Hubbard  .  281 

—  Francis  Emily,  +302 

—  George  Wilson,  *283 

—  Harriet  |  Hubbard),  :  07 

—  John  Pratt.  +302 

—  Laura.  283 

—  Marv  Pratt.  +302 

—  Marv  Stocking  (Hubbard),  283 

—  Mehetable  Brown  (Hubbard),  283 

—  Phebe  (Hubbard),  302,  307 

—  Richard.  *:  07 

—  Richard  Hubbard,  +302 

—  Wickhum,  2ns 

Rogers.  Hannah  (Hubbard),  287 
Rugg.  Datus.  287 

—  Ruth  (Hubbard).  287 
Sage,  Klisha  Lefflngwell,  2s!) 

—  Elisha  Thomas,  *289 

—  Elisha  William,  *2S9 

—  Eliza  Bror.son  (Hubbanl),  289 

—  Elizabeth  Maria.  *2S9 

—  Frank  Bntler,  *289 

—  George  Hubbard.  *28t) 

—  Martha  Antoinette.  *2S9 

—  Orren  Bronson,  *289 
Savage.  Elizabeth  (D'Anbin),  274 

—  Esther  (Ranney),  *274 

—  John.  274 

—  Mary  (Rannev).  *274 

—  Marv  (Stow),  292 

—  Nathaniel,  274   202 

Scovil.  Rosanna  (Hubbard!,  2^0 
-^  Samuel.  280 
Beymonr,  Giles.  302.  303 

—  Marv  (Hubbard),  302,  308 

—  Richard,  200 


Shafter,  James  McMillan,  299 

—  Julia  (Hubbard),  299 
Shattuck,  Eunice  (Lamphere),  440 

—  William.  440 

Sill,  Joseph.  278,  802 

—  Phebe  (Lord ),  278.  302 
Smith,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  278 

—  Agnes  (Hubbard),  2e4 

—  David.  289 

—  Edmund  Kirby,  +291 

—  Edward  Hubbard,  *2S8 

—  Elias.  280 

—  Eliphalet.  289 

—  Eliza  (Hubbard),  308 

—  Elnathan,  *291 

—  Emma.  *2SS 

—  Frances  Cornelia,  *308 

—  Frances  (Kirbv),  291 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard)  Smith,  289 

—  Hazael.  2M) 

—  Ira  C,  308 

—  James,  286 

—  Jedediah.  301 

—  Jemima  (Hubbard).  289 

—  Jerusha  (Hubbard),  289 

—  John.  27S 

—  Joseph.  200 

—  Joseph  Lee,  +291 

—  Julia,  *2S8 

—  Lewis.  2S4 

—  Lucia  Hyde  (Hubbard),  2S8 

—  Mary,  *2>8 

—  Marv  C.  (Hubbard),  2S2 

—  Marv  (Hubbard \  28K 

—  Matthew  Hubbard,  *308 

—  Rhoda  (Hubbard).  301 

—  Samuel.  295 

—  Solomon  B.,  288 

—  Thankful  (Hubbard),  290 

—  Thomas  W..  282 

—  William.  2S9 
Snover,  Charles  D..  442 

—  Cinthia  Hubbard  (Hitchcock),  *442 
Spencer,  Edward,  279 

—  Samuel,  291 

—  Susan  (Hubbard).  279 
Steel.  Ann  (Bishop),  270 

—  James,  270 

Sterling,  Caroline  E.  (Hubbard),  304 

—  D.  G.,  304 
Stewart.  Abigail,  *287 

—  Electa  (Hubbard),  287 

—  Frederick.  287 

—  Harriet,   *287 

—  Lorenzo,  *2S7 

—  Martin,  *287 

—  Richard,  *287 

Stone,  Esther  ( Kirby),  276 
Stow  Joseph,  291 

—  Lvdia  (Hubbard).  291 

—  Sarah  (Bulkley).  291 
Stowe,  Abraham,  284 

—  Martha  (Hubbard).  2S4 
Strader.  William  Matthew,  308 
Strong,  E.  C.  303 

—  Mary  G.  (Hubbard).  303 

Sutton.  Harriet  Strong  (Hubbard),283 

—  James  C  283 

Swallow,  Clarissa   R.  (Hubbard),  29S, 
44(1 

—  Nahum.  298.  440 

Taylor.  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  300 

—  Nathaniel  W..  300 
Thomas.  Ansel,  2S1 

—  Clarissa  (HubbanP,  281 
Thompson,    Harriet   (Hubbard)  Rob- 
erts. 307 

—  Joseph,  292 

—  Rhoda  (Hubbard),  292 

—  William,  307 
Tibbetts,  Esther,  286 

Titcomb.  Anna  Sophia  (Hubbard),  306 

—  Arthur,  306 


Townsend,  George,  *303 

—  Jonathan,  303 

—  Mary,  *303 

—  Ruth  (Hubbard),  303 
Trumbull,  J.  Hammond,  269 
Tryon.  Amos,  27* 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  27s 
Turner.  Richard.  301 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  30] 
Turpin,  Mary  (Hubbard),  282 
Van  Campen,  Moses.  279 
Viets.  Anna  (Hubbard),  300 

—  Benjamin  E.,  300 

—  Edward,  *3O0 

—  Francis  Hubbard.  *::('0 

—  Scott,  *30l) 
Walker,  Charles,  307 

—  Mary  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  307 
Walkley.  Prudence  i  Hubbard),  286 

—  Solomon.  2-6 

Ward.  Elizabeth  (Adkins),  277 

—  John,  275 

—  Josiah.  'j77 

—  Margaret  (Hubbard),  275 
Warner,  Carrie,  *284 

—  Henry.  *2M 

—  Louisa.  *284 

—  Marv.  *284 

—  Mini  (Hubbard),  2s4 

—  Theron,  2>4 

—  William,  *2-4 

Waters.  Dollv  (Hubbard),  294 

—  Dorothy  (Hubbardi.  294 

—  John  F..  294 

Watkinson.  Hannah  (Hubbard),  280 

—  Jane,  *2S0 

—  John  H..  *2S0 

—  John  R.,  280 

Watts,  Elizabeth  (— '•  .  270 

—  Elizabeth  (Steel),  270 

—  Richard,  270 

—  Thomas.  270,  275 

—  William,  270 
Weeks,  Frank  B..  306 

—  Helen  Louisa  (Hubbard).  306 
Weller,  Fanny  (Hnbbard).  287 

—  James.  2*7 

—  Louisa  (Hubbard  I'.-  2~7 

—  William,  287 
Wells.  David.  278 

—  Phei.e  (Hit   bard).  278 
Wetmore   Chauneey,  *•'  0- 

—  Cornelia.  *302 

—  Elizabeth.  *275 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard).  274,  275 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  276 

—  Harriet.  *:  02 

—  Henry.  *302 

—  Katherine  (.Leete),  275 

—  Lucy.  *302 

—  Marv.  *302 

—  Marv  (  Plain.  275 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard).  302 

—  Samuel,  270.  :01 

—  Sarah  (Hall).  275 

—  Thoma-,  *:'u.  '.'74,  275 
White.  Charles   288 

—  Jessica,  +442 

—  Laura  M.  (Kendall),  *442 

—  Luther.  '442 

—  Mary  (Smith).  *288 

Wilcox.  Ann  Elizn  (Hubbard),  2S3 

—  Charles.  :;i  6 

—  Harmon,  298 

—  Joseph  F...  283 

—  Maria  Mabel  (Hubbard),  298 
Willard.  Sarah  (Bobbins),  306 

—  Simon.  306 
Willett,  Benoni.  270 

—  Eleanor  (Watts)   Brown-Clements. 

270 

—  John.  270 

—  Nathaniel,  270 


478 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Willett,  Thomas.  '.'TO 
Williams,  Ann  (Edwards),  288 

—  Jahiel.  238 
Wood,  Eunice,  *284 

—  Harlan.  *2S4 

—  Louisa  (Hubbard),  284 


Wood,  Mary,  *284 

—  Oirin.  284 
Wright,  Earl,  *2~6 

—  Elizabeth.  *276 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  276 

—  Hepzebah,  *276 


Wright.  John,  *276 

—  Jonas,  *276 

—  Mary,  *27H 

—  Sarah,  *270 

—  Thomas,  *276 


HUIiBARD    AND  HULBERD- HUBBARDS. 


Allen,  Samuel,  71 

Ashley,  Ruth  (Hubbard),  72 

—  William,  72 
Clark,  Joseph,  72 

—  Naomi  (Hubbard),  72 
Cooke,  AmasB,  73 

—  Ann  Maria  (Hubbard),  73 

—  Chauncey  Ernest.  *73 

—  Theodore  Frederick,  *73 
Delano,  Amos,  72 

-r-  Lydia  (Hubbard),  72 
Francis,  Robert,  72 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  72 
Gilbert,  Or.  John,  73 
Gleason,  Ezra,  73 

—  Fanny  Belding  (Hubbard),  73 
Hubbard,  Adelaide,  73 

—  Albert  B„  72 

—  Albert  Wells,  73 

—  Alma  (Belding),  72 

—  Alma  D.,  72 

—  Alma  Rose,  73 

—  Alphonso,  72 

—  Ann  Maria,  73 

—  Antoinette,  72 

—  Aznbah,  72 

—  Caroline  Mills  (Gilbert),  73 

—  Charles  S.,  72 

—  Charles  T..  72 

—  Chauncey,  72 

—  Chauncey  George,  73 

—  Chauncey  Pomeroy,  72,  73 

—  Daniel,  71,  72 

—  Daniel  S..  72 

—  Daniel  Stearns,  73 

—  Dorothy,  72 

—  Elizabeth,  72 

—  Emily,  73 

—  Emily  (Hubbard).  73 

—  Emma  Roxanna  (Spencer),  73 

—  Esther  ( — ?),  72 

—  Faith,  73 


Hubbard,  F>mny  Belding,  73 

—  Fanny  (Stearns),  72 

—  Florence  Mildred.  73 

—  Florence  Nightingale  (Prentiss),  73 

—  Frances,  72 

—  Frances  Maria,  72 

—  Franklin,  72 

—  Franklin  Belding,  72 

—  Harold  C,  73 

—  Hugh  Wells,  73 

—  James,  72 

—  Lois,  72,  73 

—  Lois  (Pomeroy?),  72 

—  Loyal  George,  73 

—  Lucy,  72 

—  Luke  Cressie,  73 
,  —  Lydia,  72 

—  Margaret  S.,  72 

—  Maria  E   (Seymour),  72 

—  Martha  (Livermore).  72 

—  Mary,  73 

—  Mary  Adelia,  73 

—  Mary  Amelia,  72 

—  Mary  Annette,  73 

—  Mary  (Wells),  *73 

—  Melissa,  72 
—  Naomi,  72 

—  Naomy  (— ?),  72 

—  Nathan.  72 

—  Nathan  D..  72 

—  Nathan  P.,  73 

—  Paul.  72 

—  Polly  (Blossom).  72 

—  Pomeroy,  72 

—  Pomeroy  Benton.  73 

—  Rachel  (Fally),  72 

—  Ray  Spencer,  73 

—  Royal  Chauncey,  73 

—  Ruth,  72 

—  Sally,  72 

—  Sally  (Lobdell)  Sprague,  72 

—  Sarah,  72 


Hubbard.  Theodore  Gilbert,  73 

—  Theodore  Horace.  73 

—  Theodore  Sedgwick,  73 

—  Zadoc.  72 

—  Zadock  S.,  72 
Hulberd,  Abigail,  71 

—  Anna.  71 

(— ?)  Allen,  71 

—  Daniel.  71 

—  Hannah,  71 

—  Hepzibah.  71 

—  James,  71 

—  John,  71 

—  Mary,  7 1 

—  Mary  (Baker),  71 

—  Mary  (Gan-ton).  71 

—  Mary  (Howard),  71 

—  Nehemiah,  71 

—  Rebecca,  71 

—  Ruth  (— ?),  71 

—  Ruth  (Salmon),  71 

—  Samuel,  71 

—  Sara.  71 

—  Susannah  (— ?),  71 

—  William,  71 

Hulbert,  Obadiah  Allen,  71 
Hurlbut,  Thomas,  71 
Ponder,  Mary  (Hulberd),  71 

—  Thomas,  71 

Robbins,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  72 

—  Joshua,  72 
Root,  Amos,  72 

—  Aznbah  (Hubbard).  72 
Seymour.  David,  72 

—  Sally  (Hubbard  ).  72 
Wadhams,  Caleb,  72 

—  Dorothy  (Hubbard).  72 
Wells,  Lois  (Hubbard).  72,  73 

—  Mary,  *73 

—  Stephen,  72,  73 


DESCENDANTS    OP    JA3IES    HUBBARD,    OP    GRAVESEND,    L.    I. 


Batman,  Rachel  Gordon  (Miller),  66 

—  William,  66 

Baxter,  Ensign  George,  63 
Beoket,  Mary  (Chester),  *67 

—  Thomas  A.,  67 

Bergen,  Caroline  (McPhail),  69 

—  Elias  H..  *69 

—  Ella.  *69 

-^  Francis  Henry,  +68 

—  Garret  G.,  65,  OS,  69 

—  Huldah  Holmes,  *69 

—  John  S.,  65 

—  John  Watson  Holmes,  +68 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  65,  69 

—  Mary  Jane,  *69 

—  Mary  Remsen  (Lyman),  68 

—  Meta  Benjamin  (Johnson),  68 

—  Polly  (Hubbard).  65 

—  Ruth  Seymour,  +68 

—  Sarah  (Conover),  *65,  68 

—  Teunis  G.,  68,  69 

—  Tunis  G„  *69 
Blanw,  Cornelius,  65 


Brown.  C.  E.,  69 

—  Huldah  Holmes  (Bergen),  *69 
Campbell,    Charlotte     Corlies     (Hub- 
bard), 67 

—  Duncan.  67 
Cashman,  Daniel,  68 

—  Sarah  Holmes  (Van  Brunt).  *68 
Chester,  Anna,  *67 

—  Joseph  L.,  67 

—  Katharine  (Hubbard),  67 

—  Mary,  *67 
Clapp,  Hawlev  D.,  68 

—  Huldah  Holmes  (Van  Brunt)  Dean, 

*68 
Conover.  Catherine  Ann,  *68 

—  Ellen,  *65,  68 

—  Garret.  *65 

—  Garret  P.,  65.  68 

—  Garret  Van  Doren,  *69 

—  Huldah.  *<>9 

—  Huldah  Holmes,  *68 

—  Lisle,  69 

—  Louise  (Hall).  65,  69 


Conover,  Margaret  (Hubbard),  65,  69 

—  Margaretta,  *6s 

—  Mary,  *65 

—  Mary  Rue,  *68 

—  Mrs.  Charles  H..  69 

—  Peter  P..  65,  69 

—  Sarah,  *68 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  65,  6S 

—  William,  *69 

—  Williampe.  *65,  69 
Dayton,  Elias.  65 

—  Elias  H..  68 

—  Huldah  (Conover),  *65 

—  Huldah  Holmes  (Conover),  *68 

—  Mary,  +68 

—  Ruth,  HOS 

Dean.   Huldah   Holmes  (Van  Brunt), 
*68 

—  John  J.,  6S 
Ditmars,  Lawrence.  65 
Dunck.  Walter.  63 
Ficht,  Anna,  *67 

—  Anna  Gertrude,  *67 


INDEX. 


479 


Fichf.  Dr.  C.  A..  67 

—  Elizabeth  It.  (.Hubbard),  67 

—  Frederick  P.,  *67 

—  I.elia.  *+67 

—  Louise,  MS"! 

—  Nellie  (Messier),  ti7 

—  Ralph.   HJ7 

—  Kalph  M.,  *67 

—  Spencer  8.,  *ti7 

—  William  C,  *67 

Fithian,  Charlotte  Corlies  (Hubbard). 
67 

—  Ellen,  *67 

—  William.  67 

Haeger,  Anna  (Chester),  *67 

—  Herman,  67 
Hubbard,  Abby,  65 

—  Addie  (Tilton),  67 

—  Adele.  66 

—  Agnes  Frear,  66 

—  Alice  Bartley,  66 

—  Alice  (Thomas).  68 

—  Alice  Thomas,  6S 

—  Altje  (Ryder),  6,j 

—  Anna  Grant.  66 

—  Anne,  65,  69 

—  Anne  (Thayer),  66 

—  Anne  (  Van  Brunt).  65 

—  Arianje,  65 

—  Asher.  1.5 

—  Asher  Holmes,  65,  69 

—  Barkeloo,  65 

—  Benardus.  65 

—  Beulah,  68 

—  Catharine,  65 

—  Catharine  Amelia  (Pearsall  i.  65 

—  Catharine  Anne  ( Pearsall).  6!l 

—  Catharine  (Coombs),  67 

—  Catharine  Hendrickson.  66 

—  Catharine  Holmes,  6"),  hit 

—  Catharine  (Hubbard).  66 

—  Charles.  66.  67 

—  Charlotte  (Corlies).  66.  67 

—  Charlotte  Corlies.  67 

—  Cornelia  Anna,  6N 

—  Cornelius,  66 

—  Dc  borah  Grover,  67 

—  Eleanor.  66.  67 

—  Eleanor  (Hendrickson),  67 

—  Klias,  6-1.  65.  67.  6b,  69 

—  Elias  H..  65,  69 

—  Eliza  (Wetherell),  66 

—  Elizabeth,  64,  65 

—  Elizabeth  (Bayles).  64,  69 

—  Elizabeth  Grover,  67 

—  Elizabeth  R.,  67 

—  Ella.  6« 

—  Ellen,  65,  68 

—  Emma,  66 

—  Emma  (Morrell),  66 

—  Emma  ( Wykoff).  65.  69 

—  Femmetje  (Ditmarsi,  65 

—  Frederick  Denise,  68 

—  Gertrude,  66 

—  Gertrude  Jane,  66 

—  Grace  Eleanor,  68 

—  Hannah.  64 

—  Harmanus  Barkeloo,  69 

—  Henrietta,  66 

—  Henry,  63 

—  Henrv  Crocheron,  66 

—  Huldah.  65,  69 

—  Huldah  (Holmes).  65,  68,  69 

—  Ida  (Barkeloo).  65.  69 

—  Isabel le  Miller,  66 

—  Jacobus,  65.  66.  67 

—  James.  63,  64,  65,  66,  68,  69 

—  James  Denise,  67 

—  Jane  (Morrell),  66 

—  Jane  Rebecca  (Bannan).  66 

—  Jannetje  (— ':)  Van  Driest.  64 


Hubbard,  Jeames,  64 

—  Johanna,  65 

—  John,  63,  64.  66,  67,  69 

—  John  Anthony,  66 

—  John  H.,  65,  ti'.i 

—  John  S.,  67 

—  Joseph,  67.  6S 

—  Katnerine.  67 

—  Katie  (Hendrickson),  66 

—  Kittle.  69 

—  Leonard,  65 

—  Margaret,  63,  65.  66.  69 

—  Margaret  (— ?),  63 

—  Margaret  (Conover).  66 

—  Margaret  (Lake)  Blauw,  65 

—  Margaret  (McKay).  65,  6'J 

—  Margaret  (Stoutenborough),  66 

—  Maria.  65 

—  Maria  (Ryder).  65 

—  Martha  (— ?),  64 

—  Mary,  65,  69 

—  Mary  G.,  67 

—  Mary  (Robinson).  68 

—  Neeltie  |  Lake),  65 

—  Nellie  (Shepherd)  Augustin,  67 

—  Phebe,  65 

—  Polly.  65 

—  Rachel  (Bergen),  64,  65,  69 

—  Rebecca,  64,  66 

—  Rebecca  (Swart),  66.  67 

—  Rose  (McKiernan).  66 

—  Samuel.   64.  65,  66,  6S,  69 

—  Sarah,  65.  68 

—  Sarah  (Sherman),  67 

—  Stephen.  65 

—  Susan,  66 

—  Tennis.  66 

—  Thomas.  66 

—  Timothy.  65,  69 

—  Tunis.  66,  67 

—  Walter  Thomas,  6s 

—  William,  63,  66 

—  William  Henry,  66,  67 
Hunt.  Alice,  *68 

—  Ella  (Hubbard),  68 

—  George,  68 

—  George  Wilson,  *68 

—  John  E..  6S 

—  Lin  wood  Baird,  *6S 

—  Wilson  G.,  *68 

Hutchings,   Anna    Gertrude   (Ficht), 
*67 

—  Charles  Augustus,  67 

—  Clifford.  F.  H..  +67 

—  Roger  Chadwick,  +67 
Johnson,  Ann,  +68 

—  Catherine  Ann  (Conover),  *68 

—  Edith.  +68 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  64 

—  Henry  W..  65 

—  Henry  William,  68 

—  Katharine  (Conover),  *65 

—  May,  168 

—  Mvndert.  64 

—  Sarah.  t6S 
Kiss;im,  Edward,  6^ 

—  Ellen  Elizabeth  (Van  Brunt),  *68 
Lake.  Ariantje  (Hubbard).  65 

—  Jacobus,  65 
Lovelace.  Gov.  Francis,  64 
McDonald,  Alfred,  66 

—  Henrietta  (Hubbard).  66 

Moorly.  Lady  Deborah  (  Dunck),  63,  64 

—  Sir  Henrv.  63 

Morton.  Charles  Hubbard,  *67 

—  Cornelia  Anna,  *>>7 

—  David,  67 

—  Elizabeth  Grover    Hubbard),  67 

—  Ehvood  Stokes.  *67 

—  Hester  (Hagaman),  67 

—  Walter  Harbor  Lockwood,  67 


Neumann,   Cornelia    Anna  (Morton) 
*67 

—  Louis  \\\.  67 
Ntcholls,  Gov.  Richard.  61 
I'amainora,  Indian  Chief,  64 
1'oe.  John  D.,  68 

—  Lemma  Ann  (Van  I'.runl  i.  *68 
Randolph.  Edward.  +67 

—  E.  P.,  67 

—  Lelia  I  Fichf.  *67 

—  Raymond  B..  +67 

Reiusen.  Anne  (Hubbard),  65,  69 

—  Jacob.  69 

—  Joseph,  65 
Rlggs,  Edward,  66 

—  Eleanor  (Hubbard).  66 
Robinson,  Frederick,  6b 

—  Theodosia  (  — ?).  6S 
Rowland,  Beulah  Hubbard,  *67 

—  Deborah  Grover  (Hubbard).  67 

—  Elizabeth  (McDowell),  67 

—  James,  67 

—  Nelson  Stryker,  67 
Russell,  Adele  (Hubbard).  66 

—  Michael.  66 
Schenck,  Charles,  69 

—  Huldah  (Conover).  *69 
Sherburne.  John.  16 

—  Margaret  (Hubbard).  66 
Sice.  Catharine  (Hubbard  I.  65 

—  Michael,  65 

Smith.  Alice  Bartley  (Hubbard).  66 

—  Charles  Jonathan,  66 
Sneden,  Anna  Grunt  (  Hi. board),  66 

—  Hetzel  Reviere,  66 

Stevenson,  Gertrude  Jane  (Hubbard), 
66 

—  James.  66 

Stewart.  Huldah  (Hubbard),  69 

—  Robert.  69 
Stoutenborougli.  John,  66 
Swart,  Jacob,  66 
Thomas,  Richard,  68 

—  Saiah  (Jacobus).  68 
Tompkins,  Agnes   Frear   (Hubbard), 

66 

—  Francesco  Hiancho,  66 

—  Madeline  Bianchi,  *66 
Van  Brunt,  Elias  H.,  *68 

—  Ellen  Elizabeth,  *68 

—  Ellen  (Hubbard),  65,  68 

—  Emeline  P.,  *6S 

—  Emma  (Elliot).  68 

—  Henry  Clay.  *68 

—  Huldah  Holmes,  *68 

—  Lemma  Ann.  *68 

—  Mary  Jane.  *6* 

—  Nicholas  R.,  *68 

—  Nicholas  R.,  65.  68 

—  Rutger  N.,  *68 

—  Sarah  Holmes.  68 

Van  Derzee,  Rebtcca  (Hubbard),  66 

—  Sanford,  66 

Van  Driest,  Jan  Barentze,  64 
Wall.  John,  (5,  69 

—  Mary,  *65,  69 

—  .Mary  (Hnbbard),  65,  69 

—  Rachell,   *65.  69 

—  Williamje.  *65 

—  Williampe,  *6U 

Wayne,  Susan  (Hubbard),  66 

—  Thomas.  66 

Wikoff.  Ellen  (Conover),  68 

—  Frederick  Dayton,  +69 

—  Henry  Conover.  +6S 

—  Laura  (Morford),  69 

—  Margaretta  (Conover).  *65.  68 

—  William  H.,  65 

—  William  Henry.  68 


4S0 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


DESCENDANTS    OP    JOHN    HUBBARD    AND    MARY    MERRIAM. 


Abbey,  Arthur  Eugene  Wood.  +240 

—  Emma  Elvira  (Boynton),  *240 

—  James  W.,  240 

Abbott,  Betsey  (Hubbard),  280 

—  Eliza,  *226 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  220 

—  Sarah.  *220 

—  Samuel,  230 

—  Simon,  220 

Adams.  Christopher  C,  238 

—  Harriet  (Hubbard),  238 
Alcott,  Nathaniel,  217 

Allen,  Charlotte  (Hubbard).  220 

—  Llewellyn,  220 

Allis,  Anna  (Hubbard),  234 

—  Josiah,  234 

Alvord,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  238 

—  Gejrge,  238 

Arms,  Cynthia  (Hubbard).  217 

—  Orren,  237 

Ashley,  Ann  (Drury),  238 

—  Joseph.  238 

Ayer,  Harriet  (Hubbard),  220 

—  Herbert,  220 

Bailey,  Caroline  (Hubbard),  226 

—  Edward,  226 
Baird.  James.  228 

—  Susan  (  Hubbard),  228 
Baldwin,  Mary  (Ball)  Hubbard,  222 
Bancroft,  Joseph,  224 

—  Susannah  (Hubbard),  224 
Barker,  Andrew,  236 

—  Clara  (Hubbard),  236 
Barrett,  Benjamin.  223 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard)  Howe,  223 

—  Lydia  (Minott),  223 

—  Stephen,  223 
Bartlett,  Alfred  P..  231 

—  Eunice  Noble  (Hubbard),  232,  233 

—  Phebe  (Hubbard),  231 

—  Theodore,  233 

Barton,  Margaret  (Hubbard  ).  232 

-?  Seth,  232 

Bellows,  Benjamin,  222 

—  John.  222 

—  Marv  (Hubbard)  Jennison.  222 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  222 
Bent,  David.  227 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  227 
Black.  Addie,  *226 

—  Adeline  (Hubbard),  226 

—  Edgar,  *226 

—  Eliza,  *226 

—  James  D.,  226 
Blair,  Caleb,  233 

—  Emblem  (Perkins),  '233 
Blanchard,  Joseph,  222 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard).  222 

—  Thomas,  222 
Boardman,  Abigail,  *215 

—  Hepzibah.  *215 

—  Jonathan.  *2I5 

—  Joseph,  *215 

—  Mary  (— ?).  215 

—  Mercy,  *215 

—  Mercy  (Hubbard),  215 

—  Samuel,  215 

Boltwood,  Irene  (Hubbard)  Clark,  235 

—  William,  235 
Bosworth,  James,  237 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard).  237 

—  Mary  (Smith).  237 

—  Nathaniel,  237 

Bowman,  Thezia  (Hubbard),  238 

—  William,  238 

Boynton,  Emma  Elvira,  *240 

—  Harriet  Amanda.  *24lt 

—  Mary  Gravdon  (Hubbard),  240 

—  Osmond,  240 


Bradstreet.  Abigail  (Hubbard)  Fletch- 
er, 215 

Brewster.  Casmelia  Shepherd  (Hub- 
bard). 233 

—  John  M..  233 

Bridges,  Harriet  (Hubbard),  235 

—  Thomas,  235 

Brooks,  Lucy  (Hubbard),  230 

—  Samuel.  230 
Brown,  Edward,  230 

—  Ira,  232 

—  Orra  (Hubbard),  232 

—  Persis  (Hubbard).  230 
Bulkeley,  Grace  (Thetwood),  227 

—  Joseph.  223,  227 

—  Peter,  227 

—  Rebecca  (Jones-Minott),  223,  227 
Bushnell,  Lucretia  (Hubbard),  230 
Carpenter,  Mason,  227 

Carr,  David  F.,  242 

—  Huldah  (Leavitt).  242 
Castleman,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  '220 

—  Alfred,  220 
Chamberlin,  John.  232 

—  Mehitable  (Hubbard),  232 
Champion,  Epaphroditus,  234 

—  Lucretia  (Hubbard),  234 
Chapin,  Rachel  (Hubbard),  236 
Chase,  Durfee.  237 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  237 
Church,  Esther  (More),  *224 

—  John  Hubbard,  +224 

—  Stephen,  224 

Churchill,  Anna  (Hubbard),  237 

—  Moses,  237 

—  Samuel,  237 
Clapp,  Joel,  220 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard).  220 
Clark,  Amanda  (Hubbard),  235 

—  Asahel,  235 

—  Danforth.  235 

—  Irene  (Hubbard).  235 

—  Keziah  (Hubbard),  23S 

—  Leonard.  238 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  235 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  220 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard).  226 

—  Simeon,  235 

—  Wallace,  226 

—  William.  220 

Cleveland,  Amelia  (Hubbard)  Warner, 
239 

—  Anne  (Hubbard),  220 

—  James,  220 

—  Lewis,  239 

Clough,  Anna  (Hubbard),  228 

—  Joseph,  228 

Collins,  Lucy  (Hubbard),  2.37 

—  Oscar,  237 

Collister,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  232 

—  John,  232 
Conant,  Andrew,  224 

—  Mary  (-'?)  Hubbard,  224 
Cooke,  Abigail  (Hubbard).  22 

—  Catharine  Matilda,  *225 

—  George  Francis.  *225 

—  George  Wheeler,  *225 

—  Godfrey.  225 

—  Helen  Maria.  *225 

—  Henry  Hubbard,  *225 

—  Mary  E..  *225 

Copeland,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  236 

—  Orson,  236 

Coughlin.  Anna  (Hubbard),  237 
Cowdin,  Dorinda  (Hubbard),  230 

—  John.  230 
Cowles,  David.  239 

—  Hannah  (Pitkin),  234 

—  Samuel,  210 


Cowles,  Sarah  (Hubbard),  216 

—  Timothy,  234 
Cox,  John,  237 

—  Marietta  (Hubbard),  237 
Crocker,  Beal,  239 

—  Editha  (Hubbard),  239 
Curtis,  Charles,  231 

—  Lizzie  A.  (Tyler),  231 
Curtiss,  Pattella  (Hubbard),  237 

—  William,  237 
Daniels,  Robert,  230 
David,  Charles  H„  220 

—  Eleanor  (Hubbard),  220 
Davis,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  223 

—  Daniel,  215 

—  Edmund,  230 

—  Ethan,  230 

—  Eunice  (Hubbard),  230 

—  Israel,  220 

—  Joseph,  223 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  215 

—  Mary  (Meade),  215 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  226 

—  Samuel.  215 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  230 
Day,  Andrew,  231 

—  Emma  (Hubbard),  231 

—  Jonathan.  233 

—  Laura  (Hubbard),  233 

—  Willard.  231 

Dean.   Harriet  Carpenter  (Moriarty^ 
242 

—  Myron  Munson,  242 
Delano,  Dorothy  (Hubbard),  239 

—  Lucretia  (Hubbard),  239 

—  William,  '239 
Dennis,  David,  233 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  233 
Dimock,  Cornelia,  *222 

—  Cornelius,  *222 

—  De  Witt.  222 

—  Florence.  *222 

—  Maria  ( Hubbard),  222 
Dodge,  Calvin,  228 

—  Lucy  Moore  (Hubbard),  8!so 
Dunn,  Charlotte  (Hubbard),  236 
Edgerton,  Charles.  232 

—  Sophia  (Hubbard),  232 
Edwards.  Rev.  Jonathan,  215 
Elson,  John.  214 

Ely,  John,  236 

—  Mercy  (Bliss),  236 
Farnsworth.  Levi,  225 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  225 
Farwell.  Abigail  (Hubbard),  222 

—  Oliver,  222 
Fay,  John,  230 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  230 
Field,  Christine  (Hubbard),  235 

—  Christine  (Hubbard)  Field,  235 

—  Ebenezer.  235 

—  Elisha.  238 

—  Henry.  238 

—  Lucia  (Hubbard),  238 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  238 

—  Paul,  235 

—  Persis  (Hubbard),  238 

—  Seth,  23s 

Fisher,  Helen  Maria  (Hubbard),  241 

—  James,  241 

Fletcher,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  215 

—  Samuel,  215 
Gale.  Cyrus.  227 

—  Ellen  (Hubbard),  227 
Gates,  Caroline  (Hubbard),  236 

—  George,  236 
Gavlord.  John   222 

—  Melinda  (Hubbard),  222 
Giles,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  225 


INDEX. 


481 


Glidden,  Grace  (Hubbard),  225 

—  Richard,  225 
Goodrich,  David,  217 

—  Josiah,  210 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  216 

—  Prudence  (Churchill),  217 
Colliding,  John,  226 

—  Milicent  (Hubbard),  226 
Graves,  Achsah  (Hubbard),  239 

—  Alden,  239 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  235 

—  Huldah  (Hubbard),  23S 

—  Jeremiah,  236 

—  Lucinda  (Hubbard),  236 

—  Simeon,  235,  238 

Gray,  Edward  Payson,  *239 

—  Emeline  Amanda  (Hubbard),  239 

—  Emma  Amanda,  *239 

—  George  Dickman,  *239 

—  Giles  Hubbard,  *239 

—  Henry  Martyn,  *239 

—  Nathaniel,  239 

Greenly,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  233 

—  William.  233 
Griswold,  David,  221 

—  Edward,  217 

—  Laura  (Hubbard,),  217 

—  Susan  (Hubbard).  221 
Grover,  Eliphalet,  241 

—  Mary  Ann  (Gookin),  241 
Grow,  Lemuel.  225 

—  Susan  (Hubbard),  225 
Gunn,  Elizabeth  (Wyatt),  235 

—  Samuel,  235,  236 

Hackett,  Augusta  (Hubbard),  237 

—  Augustus,  237 
Hale,  Benjamin,  227 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  227 
Hall,  Alvan,  231 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  232 

—  Erastus,  232 

—  Lydia  (Hubbard),  226 

—  Mary  E..  *231 

—  Peter,  226 

—  Philetta  (Hubbard),  231 
Harrington  (?).  Honore  (Hubbard),  221 

—  (?)  Thomas,  221 
Hawley,  Gen.  Joseph.  238 
Hayden,  Cotton,  239 

—  Samantha  (Hubbard),  239 
Hayward,  Phebe  (Hubbard),  226 

—  Samuel,  226 

Haywood,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  215 

—  John,  215 

—  Samuel,  215 
Henderson,  Timothy,  238 

—  Tryphenia  (Hubbard)  Kellogg,  238 
Herrick,  Charles,  233 

—  Emily  (Hubbard),  233 

Hey  wood,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  224 

—  Charles,  224 

Higgins,  Achsah  (Hubbard),  239 

—  Ebenezer.  239 
Hill,  Charles  N.,  241 

—  Cocrilla  Wood  (Hubbard),  241 
Hitchcock,  Charles,  233 

—  Cornelia  (Hubbard)  Wells,  233 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  232 

—  Noah,  232 

Hoar,  Esther  (Hubbard),  215 

—  Leonard,  215 
Hobbs,  Marcus.  230 

—  Sarah  E.  (Hubbard),  230 
Holcomb,  Ann  (Hubbard),  218 

—  Judah,  217,  2)8 
Hollister,  Abiah  (— ?),  214,  216 

—  Abraham,  214 

—  Elisha,  221 

—  Elizur.  221 

—  John,  214,  216,  221 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard).  214 
Holt,  Azubah  (Hubbard),  230 

—  Clarissa  (Hubbard),  226 


Holt,  Joab  S.,  226 

—  Moses,  23U 

Hoover,  Alden  Bobbins,  *231 

—  Edgar  Malone,  *2tfl 

—  Edith  Blanche,  *231 

—  Henry.  231 

—  Mary  Bertha,  *231 

—  Raymond  Sabin,  *231 

—  Sarah  Frances  (Hubbard),  231 
House,  Lois  (Hubbard),  221 

—  Mathew,  221 

—  William,  221 

Howe,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  223 

—  David,  223 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  *223 

—  Israel,  223 

—  John,  230 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  230 

—  Persis  (Hubbard),  230 

—  Silas,  230 
Hubbard,  Aaron   237 

—  Abby,  228,  236 

—  Abel,  225,  22S.  229,  2--;0 

—  Abigail,  215,  216,  217,  220, 222,  223. 

224,  225,  229,  235,  238 

—  Abigail  (—?),  218 

—  Abigail  (Alcott),  217 

—  Abigail  (Allen),  230 

—  Abigail  (— ?)  Bailey,  226 

—  Abigail  (Brown),  223,  227 

—  Abigail  (Bruce),  220 

—  Abigail  (Clapp),  238 

—  Abigail  (Clarke),  225 

—  Abigail  (Hills),  217 

—  Abigail  (Hollister),  218 

—  Abigail  (Jennison),  224 

—  Abigail  (Kellogg)  Atherton,  235 

—  Abigail  (Labaree),  225 

—  Abigail  (Lewis),  235 

—  Abigail  (Sage),  220 

—  Abigail  (Sheldon),  237 

—  Abigail  (Smith),  235,  238 

—  Abigail  (Talcott),  222 

—  Abigail  (Taylor),  228 

—  Abigail  (Thayer),  239 

—  Abner  Pingree,  227 

—  Abraham,  226 

—  Achsah,  239,  241 

—  Achsah  (Graves),  239 

—  Ada  (Thurston),  237 

—  Adam.  237 

—  Addie,  226 

—  Addison,  229 

—  Adelaide,  216 

—  Adelia,  217 

—  Adeline,  221,  226 

—  Adolphus,  218 

—  Agnes,  217,  229 

—  Agnes  (Walcott),  236 

—  Ahira,  220 

—  Alanson,  239 

—  Albert,  237 

—  Albert  Granville,  229 

—  Aid  is,  233 

—  Alexander,  237 

—  Alfred,  230,  237 

—  Almeda  (Child),  221 

—  Almira  (Mead).  216 

—  Almira  Nash,  240 

—  Alona,  230 

—  Althea  (Badger).  216 

—  Althea  (Parmenter),  239 

—  Amamda  (Wood),  236 

—  Amanda,  235,  238 

—  Amanda  (Mayhew),  234 

—  Amanda  Melinda,  221 

—  Amelia,  226,  233,  239 

—  Amelia  (Hale),  222 

—  Amelia  (Wood).  222 

—  Amos,  220,  226,  22S 

—  Amy,  224 

—  Andalusia,  233 

—  Andrew,  216 


Hubbard,  Ann.  215,  21C,  218,  220 

—  Ann  (Carpenter).  227 

—  Ann  (Hubbard),  220 

—  Ann  Matilda  (Grover).  241 

—  Anna,   218,  228,  229,  232,  233,  234, 

235,  237 

—  Anna  Childs  Webster,  239 

—  Anna  (Eddy),  228 

—  Anna  (Foster),  220 

—  Anna  Giles,  242 

—  Anna  (Hubbard),  238 

—  Anna  (Lane),  237 

—  Anna  P.,  226,  227 

—  Anna  (Stratton),  221 

—  Anne,  217.  220,  221,  227,  235,  238 

—  Anne  (Alvord),  217 

—  Anne  (Churchill),  237 

—  Anne  (Dean),  236 

—  Anne  (Hubbard),  238 

—  Anne  (Hunt),  235 

—  Anne  (Joslyn),  226 

—  Anne  (Pomeroy),  238 

—  Anne  (Warner).  215,  234 

—  Anne  Yeiser  (Crawford),  227 

—  Annette  D.  (Cummings),  240 

—  Annie,  23s 

—  Annis  Melinda,  225 

—  Anson,  222 

—  Appleton,  228 

—  Appleton  Burnham,  229 

—  Arabella  (Cogswell),  233 

—  Arabella  (Morgan),  236 

—  Arad,  235 

—  Artemas,  218 

—  Arthur,  221,  230 

—  Arthur  Ashley,  227 

—  Asa.  225 

—  Aeahel,  218,  222 

—  Ashbel,  220 

—  Asher,  237 

—  Ashley,  227,  238 

—  Attai.  226 

—  Augusta,  230,  237 

—  Augustus,  228 

—  Aurora  (Gibson).  217 

—  Austin  Lyman,  241 

—  Austin  Osgood,  240 

—  Azubah,  230 

—  Azubah  (Moore),  223,  230 

—  Bathsheba,  232 

—  Bela,  236 

—  Benjamin,  217,  220,  225,  229,  230 

—  Benjamin  Franklin,  240 

—  Bertha  (Coleman),  229,  230 

—  Betsey  (Bartlett).  226 

—  Betsey  (Dole),  238 

—  Betsey  (Eames),  226 

—  Betsey  Eames,  226 

—  Betsey  (Hubbard),  226,  231 

—  Betsey  (Jones),  228 

—  Betsey  (Sawtelle),  229 

—  Betsey  (Smith),  229 

—  Betsey  (Taylor),  217 

—  Betsy,  224,  226.  230,  231 

—  Betsy  Olive,  236 

—  Betty,  224 

—  Beulah,  224 

—  Billa,  226 

—  Billey,  229 

—  Brigham,  226 

—  Buckley,  226 

—  Burdette,  216 

—  Caleb,  238 

—  Caleb  Trowbridge,  238 

—  Calvin,  220,  226,  227 

—  Calvin  Rolfe,  227 

—  Carlos,  242 

—  Caroline,   220,   222,  226,  236,  287, 

238,  242 

—  Caroline  (Bennett),  230 

—  Caroline  (Blair),  233 

—  Caroline  (Coolidge),  230 

—  Caroline  (Fiske),  220 


482 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Hubbard,  Caroline  (Homer),  232 

—  Caroline  (Hubbard),  222 

—  Caroline  (Jones),  220 

—  Caroline  (Patterson),  218 

—  Caroline  ( Pratt),  246 

—  Caroline  ( Root),  221 

—  Casmelia  Shepherd,  233 

—  Catharine  (Ogden),  237 

—  Catharine  (Van  Alstine).  237 

—  Catherine  (McPherson),  228 

—  Catherine  (Nash),  240 

—  Catherine  Nash.  241 

—  Catherine  (Weld),  220 
Cecil   2°0 

—  Charles,  217,  218,  220,  226,  227,  230, 

233,  236,  237,  239 

—  Charles  Allen,  231 

—  Charles  Dickman,  242 

—  Charles  Gilman,  227 

—  Charles  Joseph,  227 

—  Charles  Leroy,  231 

—  Charlotte,  220,  221,  236 

—  Charlotte  (Bailey),  233 

—  Charlotte  Bailey,  233 

—  Charlotte  Buckley  (Rolfe),  *226 

—  Charlotte  (Forbes),  222 

—  Charlotte  (Hunt),  222 

—  Charlotte  Marie  (Avery)  Whitney, 

227 

—  Charlotte  (Moody),  218 

—  Chester,  2l8,  236,  238 

—  Chloe,  217,  220 

—  Christia(— ?),  236 

—  Christine,  235 

—  Christine  (Gunn),  235,  238 

—  Christopher,  220 

—  Christopher  Columbus,  227 

—  Clara,  236 

—  Clara  Sawyer,  234 

—  Clarence,  222 

—  Clarissa,  226,  235,  240 

—  Clarissa  (Fay),  229 

—  Clarissa  (White).  234 

—  Clarissa  White,  241 

—  Clarissa  (Wright),  222 

—  Clark,  226 

—  Clark  M.,  231 

—  Claudius  B.,  230 
(Clement),  227 

—  Clinton  S.,  231 

—  doe.  232 

—  Cloe  (Goodall),  232 

—  Columbus,  229 

—  Cora,  220,  235 

—  Cordelia  (Brooks),  239 

—  Cornelia,  222,  233 

—  Cornelia  (Felt),  221 

—  Cornelia  Underwood,  231 

—  Corrilla  Wood,  241 

—  Cynthia,  232,  237 

—  Cynthia  (Clark),  237 

—  Cynthia  (Gould),  220 

—  Cyrus,  218,  226,  227,  230 

—  Danforth,  218 

—  Daniel,  214,  215,  216,  224,  226,  229, 

232,  233,  236 

—  Darius,  22S 

—  David,  214,  216,  217,  221,  222,  224, 

225,  233,  237,  23S 

—  David  Elizur,  221 

—  David  Leonard,  221 

—  David  Lyman,  221 

—  Davis,  230 

—  Deborah  Bowditch  (Dean),  242 

—  Dennison,  217,  221 

—  Desire,  226 

—  Diana  (Rawson).  228 

—  Dickman,  239,  242 

—  Dolly  M.,  226 

—  Dorcas  (Pingree),  227 

—  Dorcas  (White),  229 

—  Dorcas  (Whitney),  229 

—  Dorinda,  230 


Hubbard,  Dorothy,  224,  239 

—  Dorothy  (Brown),  229 

—  Dorothy  (Dakin),  224 

—  Dorothy  (Kellogg),  236 

—  Douglas,  213,  217,  220,  232,  236 

—  Dudley,  220 

—  Dvvignt.  233 

—  Eben,  224 

—  Ebenezer,  215,  224 

—  Ede,  229 

—  Edith,  231 

—  Editha.  239 

—  Editha  (Field),  239,  240 

—  Edmund,  215,  210,  230,  232,  233 

—  Edward,  217,  220,  222,  226,  233 

—  Edwin,  213,  231,  233,  234,  235 

—  Elbridge,  221 

—  Eleanor,  220 

—  Eleazer,  218 

—  Electa,  235 

—  Electa  (White).  234 

—  Eli,  225,  226,  230,  237,  239 

—  Eli  Andrews,  230 

—  Eliezur,  220 

—  Elihu,  235 

—  Elijah,  216,  217,  218,  234,  235,  237, 

238 

—  Eliphalet,  229 

—  Elisha,  216,  218,  224,  225,  226,  230, 

231,  232,  2.33,  234,  237,  239 

—  Elisha  Blair,  234 

—  Elisha  M.,  239 

—  Eliza,  220,  22s.  230,  235 

—  Eliza  Ann,  228 

—  Eiiza  (Conant),  228 

—  Eliza  (Dickinson),  239 

—  Eliza  M.,  237 

—  Eliza  (Russell).  22S 

—  Eliza  (Woodbury).  220 

—  Elizabeth,   215,   2Ui,   217,  218,  220, 

221,  223,   224,  229,   230,  232,  233, 
234,  236,  237,  238,  239 

—  Elizabeth  (Boyd),  238 

—  Elizabeth  (Church),  235 

—  Elizabeth  Cooley  (Field),  242 

—  Elizabeth  (Dudley),  217 

—  Elizabeth  Field  (Ingram),  242 

—  Elizabeth  (Ford),  216 

—  Elizabeth  Katherine,  242 

—  Elizabeth  (Rice),  230 

—  Elizabeth  (Stimpson).  220 

—  Elizabeth  (Swan),  235 

—  Elizur,  218,  221 

—  Ella  (Chase),  237 

—  Ella  M.  (Piatt),  227 

—  Ellen,  220,  221,  227,  228,  241 

—  Ellen  {—'.),  220 

—  Ellen  M.,  239 

—  Ellen  (Page),  237 

—  Ellen  (Pale),  237 

—  Ellen  (Perry),  230 

—  Ellsworth,  235 

—  Elmira,  232,  233 

—  Elnathan,  226 

—  Elvira,  239 

—  Elvira  (Alvord),  239 

—  Elvira  (Tavlor),  236 

—  Emeline,  236,  240 

—  Emeline  Amanda,  239 

—  Emeline  (Cooper),  237 

—  Emerson,  226,  229 

—  Emerson  M..  226 

—  Emily,  233.  236 

—  Emma,  224.  231.  233 

—  Emma  (Fisk),  228 

—  Emma  Fiances,  242 

—  Emma  (Wheeler),  237 

—  Ephraim,  214.  218,  221,  223 

—  Erastus,  221,  234,  235 

—  Ernest.  231 

—  Ervin  Samuel.  231 

—  Esther.  215,  229,  232 

—  Esther  M.  (Stone),  226 


Hubbard,  Esther  (Mills),  233 

—  Esther  (Palmer).  237 

—  Esther  (Rice).  215,  232 

—  Eunice,  217,  225,  230 

—  Eunice  E.  (Watkins),  231 

—  Eunice  Noble,  232 

—  Eunice  (Wheeler),  225.  230 

—  Eunice  (Woodward),  225,  229 

—  Fannie,  220,  227 

—  Fannie  A.  (Small),  226 

—  Fannie  (Daniels),  230 

—  Fannie  J.,  239 

—  Fannie  Louise  (Curtis),  231 

—  Fanny.  220,  225.  235,  238,  239 

—  Fidelia,  239 

—  Flavel,  221 

—  Flora  (Alvord),  217 

—  Flora  Ella.  227 

—  Florietta,  217 

—  Fordyce  Mitchell,  233 

—  Frances,  221,  235,  236,  237 

—  Frances  (Ashton),  239 

—  Francis,  233,  236 

—  Frank.  221.  230 

—  Frank  Rolfe,  227 

—  Franklin,  242 

—  Franklin  Elisha,  227 

—  Frederick,  220.  230,  236,  237 

—  Frederick  Spelman,  220 

—  Gaines,  226 

—  George,  213,  216,  217,  218,  220,  222, 

225,  228,  229,  230,  231,  232,  235, 
236,  237,  239,  242 

—  George  B.,  228 

—  George  Darius,  228 

—  George  Dunbar,  228 

—  George  Francis,  221 

—  George  Henry,  242 

—  George  M.,  239 

—  George  Rice,  228 

—  George  Wallace,  242 

—  George  Washington,  231 

—  George  Whipple,  225 

—  Geraldine,  230 

—  Gertrude,  221 

—  Gideon,  238 

—  Gilbert  Dean.  228 

—  Giles,  236,  238.  239,  240,  242 

—  Giles  Gray,  242 

—  Grace,  222,  225 

—  Grace  Amelia,  242 

—  Guideris,  221 

—  Gurdon.  220 

—  Gurdon  Saltonstall,  220 

—  Hannah,   214.    215,  216,    217,    21S, 

220,  222,  223,  224,  226,  228,  232, 
234,  235,  237,  238 

—  Hannah  (— ?),  224 

—  Hannah  (Baker),  239 

—  Hannah  (Barnard),  238 

—  Hannah  (Bliss).  232.  233 

—  Hannah  (Blood),  223 

—  Haunah  (Cowles),  234 

—  Hannah  (Dickinson).  217 

—  Hannah  E.  (Giles),  242 

—  Hannah  (Gibson),  226 

—  Hannah  (Goodrich),  217,  220 

—  Hannah  (Johnson),  222 

—  Hannah  (Mosher),  231 

—  Hannah  (Olcutt).  217,  221 

—  Hannah  (Rice),  215,  222 

—  Hannah  (Russell).  228 

—  Hannah  (Stickney),  232 

—  Hannah  (White).  234 

—  Hannah  (Young),  235 

—  Harmon ,  222 

—  Harriet.  220,  228.  230,  232.  235,  236, 

238.  240 

—  Harriet  Julia,  240 

—  Harriet  (Hoyt),  228 

—  Harriet  (Montague),  239 

—  Harriet  (Nash).  240 

—  Harriet  (Van  Arnem),  237 


IXDEX. 


433 


Hubbard,  Harrison,  21S 

—  Harry.  229,  237 

—  Harvey,  216,  830,  237 

—  Harvey  Hall.  -37 

—  Helen.  230,  233.  236 

—  Helen  Clemence.  234 

—  Helen  Maria,  241 

—  Helen  Mary  (Sawyer),  234 

—  Helen  (Stannard),  236 

—  Helen  Wright.  221 

—  Henrietta.  236 

—  Henry,  220,  221.  226,  228,  230,  233, 

234.  235.  236.  237,  239,  241 

—  Henry  B..  229 

—  Henry  Clark,  231 

—  Henry  George.  220 

—  Henry  Jones,  228 

—  Henry  Reed.  242 

—  Hepzibah,  218 

—  Hepzibah  (Atkins),  236 

—  Hezekiah,217,  218,221,224,  229,  232 

—  Hezro.  235 

—  Hiram.  230,  237 

—  Honore.  217.  221 

—  Hope  (Miller),  239 

—  Horace,  218,  220,  225.  236 

—  Hubert  Alanson,  239 

—  Hugh,  225 

—  Huldah,  218.  224,  225,  238 

—  Huldah  (— ?),  221 

—  Huldah  (Boyden),  226 

—  Huldah  (House),  218 

—  Huldah  (Nash),  234 

—  Ida  (Boynton),  241 

—  Ira,  221 

—  Ira  Broad,  226 

—  Irene,  235 

—  Irene  A.,  229 

—  Irene  (Montague),  239 

—  Isaac,  214,  215,  210,  217,  220,  223, 

234,  235,  238 

—  Isabelle  (Simonds),  236 

—  Israel,  235.  238 

—  Jackson.  229 

—  James,  216,  220,  237 

—  James  Frederick,  220 

—  Jane,  216.  236 

—  Jane  (Banning),  231 

—  Janus,  226 

—  Jared.  238 

—  Jason.  238 

—  Jeduthan.  222 

—  Jemima,  216,  221 

—  Jemima  (Chamberlain)  Ward,  221 

—  Jemima  (Dickinson),  221 

—  Jennison  J..  225 

—  Jeremiah.  21 8.  234 

—  Jerusha,  216.  232 

—  Jerusha  (Clark).  239 

—  Jerusha  1  Hollister),  221 

—  Jerusha  Maria,  221 

—  Joanna,  238 

—  Joanna  (Dibble),  237 

—  Joanna  (Nichols),  239 

—  Joanna  ( Porter),  237,  238 

—  Joel,  226.  229 

—  John,  213,  214,  215,  216,  217,  218, 

220,  221,  222.  223,  224.  225,  226, 
228,  230,  232,  233, 234,  235,  236,  237 

—  John  A..  225 

—  John  Agnew,  237 

—  John  Flavel,  221 

—  John  Frank,  226 

—  John  Henry.  241 

—  John  Hutchinson,  229 

—  JohnM.,  226 

—  John  Milton,  241 

—  John  Stillman,  227 

—  John  W  .  241 

—  Jonas.  226,  228.  229 

—  Jonathan.  214,  215,   216,  217,  218, 

220,  221.   222,  223.  224,  225,228, 
232,  236,  237,  238 


Hubbard.  Jonathan  B.,  225 

—  Jonathan  Ely,  236 

—  Joseph,  215,  216,  217,  221.  223,  224, 

226,  227,  229,  232,  233,  237,  238 

—  Josephine,  240 

—  Joshua,  215,  216 

—  Josiah.  217,  220,  222.  225,  233 

—  Josiah  Humphrey,  225 

—  Josiah  Mills,  233 

—  Josiah  Nelson,  228 

—  Jotham.  225 

—  Judith  (Stevens),  237 

—  Julia,  21b,  236 

—  Julia  A.  (Hayes).  240 

—  Julia  E.,  239 

—  Julia  E.  (Darling).  239 

—  Julia  Elizabeth,  221 

—  Julia  May,  227 

—  Julia  (Palmer  1.  233 

—  Julia  (White),  234 

—  Juliet,  22(1 

—  Juliette  Elvira  (Smith),  220 

—  Julius.  232 

—  Julius  C.  221 

—  Justin,  236 

—  Kate  E.  (Lee),  242 

—  Kate  Eliza,  242 

—  Kelita,  236 

—  Keziah,  23S 

—  Keziah  (Lyman).  239 

—  Larette  (Haskell),  230 

—  Laura,  217,  220.  233 

—  Laura  (— V).  220 

—  Laura  (Mitchell),  233 

—  Laura  (Squires),  222 

—  Lawrence.  232 

—  Lemuel.  217.  236 

—  Leonard.  221 

—  Leonora  Dorcas.  227 

—  Leroy  Watkins.  231 

—  Levi.  225.  229,  230 

—  Levinia  (Prescottj,  238 

—  Lewis,  225 

—  Lewis  Foster,  226 

—  Lillian,  221 

—  Linus,  236 

—  Lizzie,  222 

—  Lizzie  Cordelia,  239 

—  Lois,  221,  223,  242 

—  Lois  Fuller  (Carr),  242 

—  Lois  (Nye),  226 

—  Lois  (White),  228 

—  Lois  (Wright),  221 

—  Lorenzo,  218 

—  Lottie  (McMiller),  237 

—  Louis.  233 

—  Louis  Vaughan.  231 

—  Louisa.  232,  233.  234 

—  Louisa  (Allen),  228 

—  Lucia,  238 

—  Lucinda,   21S,   222.   232,   234.  236, 

237 

—  Lucinda  Ann    (Reed).  242 

—  Lucinda  (Nelson),  22S 

—  Lucinda  (  Noble).  232 

—  Lucius,  233.  235,  238 

—  Lucius  Frederick,  239 

—  Lucius  Lee,  239 

—  Lucius  Virgilius,  239 

—  Lucretia.  217,  234,  236,  239 

—  Lucretia  (Ashley).  238 

—  Lucretia  (Buck).  221 

—  Lucretia  Goodwin.  227 

—  Lucretia  (Pixlev).  237 

—  Lucv,  216,  217,  218,  223,  224,   227, 

228.  229,  230,  232,   234,   235,   237, 
238,  239 

—  Lucy  (Bigelow),  230 

—  Lucy  (Boltwood).  235 

—  Lucy  D.  (Wood),  241 

—  Lucy  (  Field),  239 

—  Lucv  (Fuller),  226 

—  -  Lucy  (Gaylord),  233 


Hubbard.  Lucy  (Hall).  237 

—  Lucy  (Howard),  226 

—  Lucy  ( Joslyn).  230 

—  Lucy  Moon-,  228 

—  Lucy  (Moulton)  Whitterr.ore,  231 

—  Lucy  (Norcross).  229 

—  Lucy  (Phillips).  -'17 

—  Lucy  (Stack),  218 

—  Lucy  (Stearus),  234 

—  Lucy  (Taintor),  230 

—  Lucy  (Williams),  237 

—  Lunian  Famsworth,  225 

—  Luther,  218,  228,  229,  237,  238 

—  Luther  Prescott,  228,  M~5.  386 

—  I.vdia,  223.  226.  230,  232 

—  Lydia  (Blodgett).  232 

—  Lydia  (Dickson  |,  22s 

—  Lydia  (Raymond),  230 

—  Lvdia  (White),  226 

—  Lyndon,  230 

—  Mabel,  217.  220,  232 

—  Mabel  Charlotte,  227 

—  Mabel  (Hopkins).  232.  233 

—  Mabel  (Hubbard),  217,  218 

—  Mabel  (Wadsworthi.  221 

—  Mahala  (—  '!)  Crampton  1?).    221 

—  Mahala  ( — ''.)  Lamphere    ?),  221 

—  Mahala  (—  ?)  Wheaton,  2;i 

—  Marcia  (Wood),  231 

—  Margaret,  232,  233,  239 

—  Margaret  (Gaylord).  232 

—  Margaret  (Van  Valkenburgh),  239 

—  Maria.  222.  226.  228,  232,  210 

—  Maria  (Dodd),  222 

—  Maria  (Gaylord).  222 

—  Maria  (Hale).  221 

—  Marian  (Swain),  235 

—  Mananna.  23S 

—  Marietta.  237 

—  Marietta  (Moore),  222 

—  Marietta  (Warren),  223 

—  Marion  Elizabeth.  242 

—  Marshall.  233.  236 

—  Martha.  216,  217.  21S.  222,  224,  225 

226,  229.  232,  236,  238 

—  Martha  Ann.  228 

—  Martha  (Darling),  239 

—  Martha  E..  239 

—  Martha  (Hollister),  216 

—  Martha  (Smith).  239 

—  Martha  (Walker).  230 

—  Martha  1  Winchester),  228 

—  Martin,  226.  236,  239 

—  Martin  E.,  239 

—  Mary,  214,  215,  216,  218,   220,  222, 

223,  224.  225.    226.  228,   230.  232, 
233.  234.  235,  236,  237,  238,  239 

—  Mary  (—  ?),  224 

—  Mary  (Adams).  223 

—  Mary  Ann,  226.  228,  235,  236 

—  Mary  Ann  (Cowles),  236 

—  Mary  (Ball).  222,  223 

—  Mary  (Barrett).  224 

—  Mary  (Batcheller).  220 

—  Mary  (Bishop),  213 

—  Mary  (  Bosworth),  237 

—  Mary  CaiT,  242 

—  Mary  (Collister).  232 

—  Mary  (Colwell).  233 

—  Mary  (Coolev),  236 

—  Mary  (Cowles).  239 

—  Mary  E.  (Flag').  226 

—  Mary  Edith,  242 

—  Mary  Elizabeth  1  Crawford),  213 

—  Mary  (Falley).  218 

—  Mary  (Fletcher),  224 

—  Mary  (Graydon),  240 

—  Marv  Graydon,  240 

—  Mary  (Gunn),  236 

—  Mary  Isabel.  227 

—  Mary  J.,  239 

—  Mary  Jane,  229 

—  Mary  (Keep),  232 


484 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Hubbard,  Mary  (Kimberly),  216 

—  Mary  L.,  239 

—  Mary  Laura,  242 

—  Mary  (Lord),  218,  221 

—  Mary  (Merriam),  213,  214 

—  Mary  (Moffatt),  22S 

—  Mary  (Patterson),  224,  228 

—  Mary  or  Polly  (Allen),  226 

—  Mary  (Rennard),  236 

—  Mary  (Root),  236 

—  Mary  (Simonds),  236 

—  5laiy  Sophia,  231 

—  Mary  Thomas,  228 

—  Mary  Walton  ( Hartshorn),  223 

—  Mary  (Warren),  239 

—  Marv  (Watrous),  232 

—  Mary  (Wellington), 228 

—  Mary  (Wells)  Allen,  225 

*-  Mary  (Wright)  Elson,  214,  216 

—  Matilda  (Childs),  229 

—  May,  220 

—  Mehetable,  220 

—  Mehetable  (Tyler),  220 

—  Mehitable,  232 

—  Mehitable  (Haskell),  230 

—  Mehitable  (Nash),  234 

—  Melinda,  222 

—  Melinda  (Baldwin),  222 

—  Meliscent,  224 

—  Mercy,  214,  215.  224,  226,  230 

—  Mercy  (Holbrook),  233 

—  Mercy  (Hubbard),  224,  226,  230,  231 

—  Mercy  ( Warner),  234 

—  Merrill,  226 

—  Mersylvia,  229 
_  Milicent,  226,  227 

—  Milicent  (Melvin),  226 

—  Milicent  (Parker),  226 

—  Milly,  226 

—  Miranda  (Watkins),  230 

—  Miriam,  238 

—  Miriam  (Cooley),  23S 

—  Moses,  232,  233,  236.  237,  238,  239 

—  Moses  Rodolphus,  242 

—  Moses  Williams,  237 

—  Nancy,  216,  218,  231,  237,  238 

—  Nancy  (Cowles),  239 

—  Nancy  D.,  228 

—  Nancy  Fiske.  231 

—  Nancy  (Henderson),  233 

—  Nancy  (Hubbard).  216,  218 

—  Nancy  (Lester),  221 

—  Nancy  (Sellew),  222 

—  Nancy  (Wheeler).  227 

—  Naomi  Catherine,  240 

—  Nathan,  224,  228,  229 

—  Nathaniel,  217 

—  Nathaniel  F.,  228 

—  Nellie,  228,  233 

—  Newton,  232 

—  Noadiah,  238 

—  Noah,  216,  237 

—  Noah  Ely,  237 

—  Norman,  218,  221 

—  Norman  Asa,  220 

—  Norris,  230 

—  Ochus  Graves,  239 

—  Oreama,  238 

—  Orin,  220 

—  Orra,  232 

—  Oscar,  236 

—  Otis  229 

—  Ozanca  (Cornwall),  233 

—  Ozias,  233 

—  Pamelia,    217,   21S,  220,   221,  236, 

237,  238 

—  Pamelia  (Hollister).  221 

—  Pamelia  (Hubbard),  217,  221 

—  Pamelia  (Stone),  229 

—  Parker,  238 

—  Parley,  238.  239 

—  Patience,  221 

—  Patty,  231 


Hubbard,  Patty  (—':),  220 

—  Peggy  Allen,  225 

—  Perez,  221 

—  Persis,  230,  23S,  240 

—  Persis  (Davis),  226 

—  Persis  (Keyes),  226 

—  Peter,  223,  226,  230 

—  Phebe,  224,  226,  228,  231 

—  Phebe  (Brigham),  226,  230 

—  Phebe  (Buckley?),  226 

—  Phela,  239 

—  Philander,  238 

—  Philena.  235 

—  Philetta.  231 

—  Philip.  232 

—  Phineas,  238,  239,  240,  241,  242 

—  Phinehas,  224.  228,  229 

—  Polly,  226,  229,  237 

—  Polly  (Hubbard),  226 

—  Porter,  233,  236 

—  Priscilla  (Rice),  228 

—  Prudence,  237 

—  Prudence  (Goodrich)  Holcomb,  217 

—  Prudence  (House),  221 

—  Prudence  (Kellogg),  237 

—  Prudence  (Nash),  217 

—  Prudence  (Savage).  237 

—  Prudence  (Stevens).  235 

—  Prudence  (Temple),  223 

—  Prudence  ( Wood),  230 

—  Rachel,  215,  21(i,  236 

—  Rachel  (Ely).  236 

—  Rebecca,  215,   216,   222,  223,   224, 

225,  22H,  227,  229,  238 

—  Rebecca  (Brown),  222.  224 

—  Rebecca  (Bulkeley),  223.  227 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  238 

—  Rebecca  (Hutchinson).  229 

—  Rebecca  ( Prescott),  227 

—  Rebecca  (Preston),  228 

—  Rebecca  Smith  (Hubbard),  239,  242 

—  Rebecca  (Wheeler),  227 

—  Reuben,  218 

—  Rhoda,  216 

—  Rhoda  (Ward),  237 

—  Richard,  217 

—  Richard  Dudley,  217 

—  Richard  Dunning,  218 

—  Robert  Morris.  225 

—  Rodney,  229 

—  Rodolphus.  242 

—  Rodolphus  Baker,  239 

—  Rosa  L.  (James),  227 

—  Rosalinda  (Westcott),  225 

—  Rose,  238 

—  Roswell,  21S,  225,  232,  233,  234,  235 

—  Rowley,  218 

—  Roxabella,  236 

—  Roxanna  (Hunt),  233 

—  Rufus,  216,  222,  231,  239 

—  Russell,  226 

—  Ruth,  220,  222,  232,  237 

—  Ruth  (Allen),  233 

—  Ruth  (Cobb),  220 

—  Ruth  (Dickinson),  234 

—  Ruth  (Lyman),  232 

—  Ruth  (Meacham),  220 

—  Sabina,  239 

—  Sabra,  238 

—  Sally,  229.  234 

—  Salmon,  236 

—  Salome  (Green),  236 

—  Samantha,  239 

—  Samantha  (Marsh),  226 

—  Samuel,  215,  216.  223,  224,  225,  229, 

231,  232,  233,  235.  237 

—  Samuel  Brigham,  231 

—  Samuel  D.,  226 

—  Samuel  Herbert,  231 

—  Samuel  N.,  241 

—  Samuel  Wilson,  225 

—  Samuel  Woodward,  226,  230 

—  Sandford,  233 


Hubbard,  Sarah,  214,  216,  217,  220 
221,  223,  224,  225,  226,  228,  229, 
230.  231,  232,  233,  234,  235,  236, 
237 

—  Sarah  (-?),  228 

—  Sarah  (Billings),  223 

—  Sarah  (Caldwell),  221 

—  Sarah  (Childs),  239 

—  Sarah  (Chipman),  236 

—  Sarah  (Clark),  223,  225 

—  Sarah  (Darby),  223 

—  Sarah  (Davis),  229 

—  Sarah  (Dewey),  237 

—  Sarah  E.,  230 

—  Sarah  Elizabeth,  223 

—  Sarah  Frances,  231 

—  Sarah  (Falley),  220 

—  Sarah  (Goodall),  217 

—  Sarah  (Graves).  238 

—  Sarah  (Gunn),  235 

—  Sarah  (Hale),  221 

—  Sarah  (Holbrook),  233 

—  Sarah  (Kingsbury).  217 

—  Sarah  (Lyman),  242 

—  Sarah  (Marshall),  229 

—  Sarah  (Meacham),  220 

—  Sarah  (Minor),  230 

—  Sarah  (Mitchell),  233 

—  Sarah  P.,  232 

—  Sarah  Rebecca,  229 

—  Sarah  (Rice),  228 

—  Sarah  (Smith),  235 

—  Sarah  (Smith)  Forbes.  221 

—  Sarah  (Southard),  215 

—  Sarah  (Stearns),  237 

—  Sarah  Thorp,  228 

—  Sarah  (Watson),  230 

—  Sarah  (Welch),  220 

—  Sarah  (Wheeler),  226 

—  Sarah  (Wheelock)  Cowles,  239 

—  Selina  (Jackson),  220 

—  Serena  (Tucker),  220 

—  Sereno,  222 

—  Sheldon  Blair,  234 

—  Sibyl,  226 

—  Silas,  224,  225 

—  Silas  Graves,  234 

—  Silas  Moore,  2"0 

—  Silence,  223 

—  Simeon,  22ti.  229,  230,  232 

—  Solomon,  232 

—  Solon,  218 

—  Sophia,  216,  225,  226,  232,  236 

—  Sophia  (Hale),  217 

—  Sophia  (Miller),  230 

—  Sophia  (Whitney),  236 

—  Sophia  (Wilson).  225 

—  Sophronia,  218,  226,  240 

—  Sophronia  (Sawyer),  226 

—  Spencer,  235,  236 

—  Stearns,  234 

—  Stephen,  226.  235 

—  Stephen  Ashley,  238 

—  Stillman,  231 

—  Stoton,  239 

—  Submit  (Graves),  2.35 

—  Susan,  218,  221,  225,  227,  228,  235 

—  Susan  (Breck),  233 

—  Susan  (Hartwell),  227 

—  Susan  (Hindley),  236 

—  Susan  (Howard),  226 

—  Susan  (Ludden),  239 

—  Susan  M.,  239 

—  Susan  (Rogers),  231 

—  Susanna,  233 

—  Susannah,  224,  229,  237 

—  Sylvanus,  239 

—  Sylvester,  235 

—  Tabitha,  238 

—  Tamasau  (Andrews),  218 

—  Thankful,  235 

—  Thankful  (Hatch).  220 

—  Therese  (Carter),  220 


INDEX. 


485 


Hubbard,  Thezia,  238 

—  Thomas,  215,  228,  224,  227,  228,  232 

—  Thomas  Russell,  228 

—  Thomas  Swan,  235 

—  Thomas  William,  242 

—  Tilly,  226,  227 

—  Timothy,  216,  229,  237 

—  Tryphenia,  23S 

—  Tryphenia  (Montague),  233 

—  Venetta  (Mitchell),  233 

—  Walter  E.,  235 

—  Warren,  218,  230 

—  Warren  Calhoun,  21S 

—  Wellington.  2J7 

—  Willard,  229,  230 

—  William,    216,  220.    221,  222,  226, 

22S.  229,  232,  233,  236,  237,  238, 
2:39,  240 

—  William  Hartshorn,  228 

—  William  Holden,  225 

—  William  L.,  239 

—  William  Winchester,  228 

—  Zebuna,  238 

—  Zilpha  (White),  241 
Hubert,  Jonathan,  215 
Hulbert,  John  W.,  236 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  236 
Humiston  (?),  Honore  (Hubbard),221 

—  (?),  Thomas,  221 
Hunt,  Harding,  230 

—  Harriet  (Hubbard),  230 
Huntington,  John,  239 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  239 
Hurd,  Achsah,  *241 

-a.  Catherine  Nash  (Hubbard),  241 

—  Edward  I'ayson,  *241 

—  Ellen  C,  *241 

—  George,  *241 

—  Julia,  *241 

—  Laura  Ann.  *241 

—  Lucy  G.,  *241 

—  Lucy  Jane,  *241 

—  Luke,  240 

—  Persis  (Hubbard),  240 

—  Samuel  A.,  241 

—  Samuel  Augustine,  *241 

—  Samuel  Nash,  *241 

—  Sarah,  *241 
Ingram,  Elijah,  242 

—  Elizabeth      Cooley     (Field)    Hub 

bard,  242 
Jackson,  Ebenezer,  220 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  22i» 
Jarvis,  Francis.  22S 

—  Phebe  (Hubbard),  228 
Jennison,  John.  222 

—  Mary  y  Hubbard),  222 
Jones,  Lucretia  (Hubbard),  217 

—  William,  217 

Joslyn,  Elizabeth  (Greenleaf),  226 

—  Peter,  226 

Judevine,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  225 

—  Moses,  225 
Keeney,  Martin,  222 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  222 
Keep,  Ethan,  232 

—  Lydia  (Hubbard),  232 
Kellogg,  Amos,  237 

—  Charles,  238 

—  John,  235 

?  (Sedgwick),  237 

—  Tryphenia  ( Hubbard),  238 
Keves,  Asa.  230 

—  "Daniel,  220 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  830 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  220 
Kidder,  Fanny  (Hubbard),  225 

—  Gideon,  225 
Kimberly,  Eleazer,  216 

—  John,  218 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  218 

—  Thomas.  216,  218 
Labaree,  Peter,  225 


Labaree,  Ruth  (Putnam),  225 
Lakin,  George  Shipley.  281 

—  Marion  Elizabeth,  *281 

—  Nancy  Fiske  (Hubbard),  231 
Lawrence,  Amos,  224 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  224 
Lee,  Almira  Nash  (Hubbard),  240 

—  Bermietta  Naomi,  *240 

—  Lilla  Bell,  *240 

—  Monnie  May,  *240 

—  Myrtle  Ray,  *240 

—  Rosa,  *240 

—  Timothy  W.,  240 
Leland,  Eliza  (Hubbard),  228 

—  Henry,  228 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  228 

—  Milly  (Hubbard)v226 

—  Thomas.  226 

—  William.  228 

Lewis,  Caroline  (Hubbard),  237 

—  Isaac,  237 

Libby,  Lucinda  (Hubbard),  232 

—  Lyman,  232 

Linsley,  Anne  (Hubbard),  227 
Lockwood.  John.  22U 

—  Juliet  (Hubbard).  220 
Long,  Caroline  (Hubbard),  220 

—  Charles,  220 

Lyman,  Elvira  (Hubbard),  239 

—  Gershom  Clarke,  234 

—  Horace,  239 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  234 

—  Parley  (Hubbard),  239 

—  Samuel,  239 
Mallett,  Daniel,  237 

—  Prudence  (Hubbard),  237 
Mann,  John,  235 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  235 
Marsh,  Fanny  (Hubbard),  220 

—  Mehetable  (Hubbard),  220 

—  Oreama  (Hubbard),  238 

—  Zabina,  220 

—  Zimri.  238 
Matthews.  Luther.  237 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  237 
Mattoon,  Hannah  (Hubbard),  216 

—  Nathaniel,  215.216 
May,  Benjamin,  229 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  229 
Meacham,  James  (Samuel?),  232 

—  Jerusha  (Hubbard),  232 

—  Ruth  (Hubbard),  232 

—  William,  232 
Merriam.  Robert,  213 

Mitchell,  Andalusia  (Hubbard),  233 

—  Newell,  233 

Montague,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  238 

—  John,  23S 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  215 

—  Peter,  Jr.,  215 
More,  Esther.  *224 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  224 

—  Paul,  224 

Morgan,  Mary  (Hubbard),  2:35 

—  Newton,  235 

Morse,  Amv  (Hubbard),  224 

—  Emma  (Hubbard),  224 

—  Joseph,  224 
Morseman,  Martin,  218 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  218 
Nash,  Erastus,  233 

—  Susan  (Hubbard),  233 
Nichols,  John,  220 

—  Pamelia  (Hubbard),  220 
Norcross,  Daniel,  229 

—  Sally  (Hubbard)  Rand,  229 
Oloutt,  Abigail,  218 

Paige,  Anna  (Warner),  *234 

—  James,  234 
Paine,  Ira.  237 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  237 
Parker,  Moses,  234 

—  Sally  (Hubbard),  234 


Parsons,  Martha  (Hubbard),  230 

—  Timothy,  236 

Payne,  Philena  (Hubbard),  235 

—  Wilder.  235 

Phelps,   Hannah   (Olcutt)   Hubbard- 
Post,  21S 

—  Ichabod,  218 

Poor  (?),  Esther  (Hubbard).  215 

—  (?)  Leonard,  215 
Porter,  Lucy  (Hubbard),  232 

—  Samuel,  232,  237 

Post.  Hannah   (Olcutt)  Hubbard,  213 
Powers,  Julia  (Hubbard).  236 
Price,  Lucretia  (Hubbard  \  -J34 

—  Wallace,  234 
Rand.  Leonard,  229 

—  Sally  (Hubbard),  229 
Randolph,  Harriet  (Hubbard),  236 

—  John,  236 
Raymond,  William,  230 
Reed,  Benjamin  Towns,  242 

—  Eusebia  (Stevens),  242 
Reid,  Catharine  Cook,  *225 

—  Edward,  225 

—  Edward  Loggie,  *225 

—  Horace,  Hall,  *225 

—  Jane  Elizabeth.  *225 

—  Lewis  Hubbard.  *225 

—  Roswell  Hunt,  *225 

—  Sophia  Eunice,  *225 

—  Sophia  (Hubbard),  225 

—  William  Hubbard.  *225 
Reynolds,  John,  220 

—  Mabel  (Hubbard),  220 
Rice,  Edmund,  215 

—  Elizabeth  (King),  215 

—  John,  223 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  223 

—  Samuel,  215 

—  Thamezin  (— ?),  215 
Rogers,  Alona  (Hubbard),  230 

—  William,  230 
Rolfe,  Benjamin.  226 

—  Charlotte  Buckley,  *226 

—  Phebe  (Hubbard),  226 
Russell,  Miriam  (Hubbard),  238 

—  Philip,  238 
Sabin,  Alice  M..  *230 

—  Charles  H.,  *230 

—  Eliza  (Hubbard),  230 

—  Elizabeth  M.,  *230 

—  Emma  A.,  *230 

—  Mary  Eliza,  *230 

—  Noah  P..  230 
Sanderson,  Henry.  228 

—  Mary  Thomas  (Hubbard),  223 
Sanford,  Charles,  221 

—  Ellen  (Hubbard),  221 
Sawyer,  Emeline  (Tucker),  234 

—  George  Yeaton,  234 

—  Philips,  237 

—  Ruth  (Hubbard),  237 
Scott,  Absalom.  235 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard)  Graves,  235 
Sears.  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  239 

—  Frances  (Hubbard),  237 

—  Luther.  237 

—  Nathaniel,  239 
Selden,  Thomas,  216 
Shaw,  Ella  Louise,  *23l 

—  Emma  S.,  *231 

—  Mary  Sophia  (Hubbard),  231 

—  William  Hubbard,  *231 

—  William  M.,  *231 
Shears,  Albert,  236 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard).  236 

—  Pamelia  (Hubbard),  2:36 

—  Samuel.  236 

Smith.  Abigail  (Allis),  238 

—  Elihu,  2:33 

—  Elizabeth.  233 

—  Joseph,  229 

—  Levi,  229 


486 


HUBBARD   HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Smith,  Lucy  (Hubbard),  229 

—  Nathaniel,  238 

—  Samuel  G.,  221 
Spencer,  Charles,  *222 

—  Harriet,  *222 

—  Harriet  (Hubbard),  222 

—  Norman,  *222 

—  Sarah.  *222 

—  Sophronia  (Hubbard),  240 

—  William  P.,  240 
Stearns,  Thomas,  234 

Stephens,  Abigail    (Hubbard)    Giles, 

2->5 
Stevens,  David.  222 

—  Phinehas,  235 

—  Ruth  (Hubbard),  222 
Stone,  James,  *231 

—  Philetta  (Hubbard)  Hall,  231 

—  Salmon,  229 

—  Solon.  231 

Stratton,  Hannah  (Hubbard),  226 

—  Samuel,  22(1 
Strickland,  James,  222 

—  Lucinda  (Hubbard),  222 
Strong,  Esther  (Hubbard),  232 

—  Peter,  232 

Sweet,  Lydia  (Hubbard),  230 

—  Orange,  230 

Sylvester,  Richard  Henry,  235 
Taft,  Charles  P.,  *231 

—  Harriet,  *231 

—  Mary  E.,  *231 

—  Nancy  H..  *231 

—  Nancy  (Hubbard),  231 

—  Preston.  231 
Talcott,  Alvan,  220 

—  Elijah,  21T 

—  Eunice  (Hubbard),  217 

—  Flavel,  217 

—  Florietta  (Hubbard),  217 
Taylor,  George,  232 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  232 
Temple,  Hannah  (Hubbard),  215 

—  John,  215 

Terry,  Anna  (Hubbard),  218 

—  George,  218 
Tuttle,  Leonard.  237 

—  Nancy  (Hubbard),  237 
Underwood.  Cornelia,  *231 

—  Joseph,  231 

—  Mary  Ann,  *231 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  231 
Wadsworth,  Honore  (Hubbard)  White, 

217 

—  Thomas,  217 
Wait,  Edson.  239 

—  Mary  J.  (Hubbard),  239 


Ward,  Joanna  (Hubbard),  238 

—  Levi,  221 

—  Nahum,  238 

Warner,  Amelia  (Hubbard),  239 

—  Andrew.  216 

—  Anna,  *234 

—  Daniel.  215.  216,  234 

—  Ebenezer.  239 

—  Joseph,  234 

—  Mary  (— ?).  216 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  216,  234 
Warren,  Abijah,  223 

—  Arthur  Kirke,  +231 

—  George  Waterman.  +231 

—  Herbert  Lakin.  1231 

—  Marion  Elizabeth  (Lakin),  *231 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  223 

—  Samuel,  231 

Waters,  Cynthia  (Hubbard),  232 

—  David,  232 
Watkins,  Cephos,  231 

—  Martha  (Hubbard),  229 

—  Phebe(— ?),  231 

—  Silas,  229 

Wells,  Anne  (Hubbard),  235 

—  Cornelia  (Hubbard),  233 

—  John,  233.  235 
Wetherbee,  Charles,  227 

—  Nathaniel,  229 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  227 

—  Susannah  (Hubbard),  229 
Wetherell,  Alex,  220 

—  May  (Hubbard).  220 
Wheeler,  Moses,  225 

—  Peter.  227 

—  Rebecca  (—'!),  227 

Wheelock,  Eliza  Ann  (Hubbard),  228 

—  William,  228 
Whitcomb,  George,  2.35 

—  Thankful  (Hubbard),  235 
White,  Anna  (Hubbard)  Allis,  234 

—  Daniel,  234 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  234 

—  Honore  (Hubbard),  217 

—  Joseph,  217 

—  Martha  (Hubbard).  222 

—  Nathan.  229 

—  Salmon,  Jr.,  234 

—  Simeon,  Jr.,  234 

—  Stephen.  217.  222 

—  Submit  (Morton).  234 
Whitnev,  A.  N. ,  240 

—  Aaron,  222 

—  Albert  Franklin,  *240 

—  Daisy  Myra.  *240 

—  Harriet  Julia  (Hubbard),  240 

—  Minnie  Clara,  *240 


Whitnev.  Newell.  *240 

—  Rosa  Julia.  *240 

—  Ruth  (Hubbard)  S:evens.  222 

—  Sophia  (Baker).  236 

—  Timothy,  230 

Wilder,  Martha  (Hubbard).  226 

—  Susannah  (Hubbard),  237 

—  Thomas,  226 

—  Willard,  237 
Wilkinson,  Cyrus,  *231 

—  David,  231 

—  Patty  (Hubbard),  231 

—  Solon  S..  *231 

—  Warren  H..  *231 
Willard,  Charles.  230 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  222 

—  Josiah,  222 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard).  230 
Williams,  Gabriel,  215 

—  Jacob,  215 

—  James  B.,  221,  222 

—  Jerusha  Maria  (Hnbbard),  221 

—  Julia  Elizabeth  (Hnbbard),  221,222 

—  Rachel  (Hubbard).  215 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  215 
Wilson.  Annis  (Holden),  225 

—  Joseph,  225 
Winthrop,  Gov.  John,  216 
Wood,  Arthur  E..  241 

—  Clarissa  White  (Hubbard).  241 

—  Elizabeth  (Bowman),  227 

—  Laura  (—  ?),  231 

—  Lucretia  Goodwin  (Hubbard.),  227 

—  Nathaniel.  231 

—  Reuben.  241 

—  Samuel,  227 

Woodbury,  Anna  (Hubbard),  235 

—  Ezekiel.  235 
Woodward,  Clark,  *230 

—  Cyrus,  *230 

—  George,  *280 

—  Harriet.  *230 

—  Lucv,  *230 

—  Luey  (Hubbard),  230 

—  Lura,  *230 

—  Timothy,  230 
Wright,  James,  221 

—  Lois  (Loom is),  221 

—  Thomas,  214 
Wrisley,  Harlow,  221 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  221 
Wyllis,  Gov.  George,  214 
Young,  Amy  Laura.  +240 

—  Frank  Hubbard,  +24n 

—  Harriet  Amanda  (Boynton),  *240 

—  Lewis  A.,  2-!0 

—  William  French,  +240 


DESCENDANTS    OP    JOHN    HUBBARD,    OF    POMFRET,  CT. 


Andrews,  Carrie  Maria  (Hubbard),  78 

—  Whipple,  78 
Bishop.  David,  74 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  74 
Bowen.  Hale.  78 

—  Harriet  (Hubbard),  78 
Bugbee.  Josiah,  74 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  74 
Carew,  Captain.  76 
Catlin.  John,  75 

—  Sarah  (Landon),  75 
Chase,  Louisa  Schuyler.  *77 

—  Mary  Schuvler  (Hubbard),  77 

—  Salina  E.  (Washburn),  77 

—  William,  77 

—  William  Allen,  77 
Crosby.  Charles,  78 

—  Virtue  (Hnbbard),  78 
Day,  Ebenezer,  78 

—  Henry,  *78 

—  Hubbard,  *78 


Day;  Mary,  *78 

—  Philena  (Hubbard),  7^ 
Durfee,  Mary  (Day)  Gladdin,  *78 
Eldridge.  James.  77 

French,  Henry  H.,  76 

—  Lucy  (Hubbard),  76 
Gladden,  Mary  (Day),  *78 

—  Nathan.  7s 

—  Sarah  (Hnbbard),  78 
Grant.  David.  78 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  78 
Grosvenor,  Anna  B.,  *75 

—  Esther  (Clarke),  75 

—  Jerusha  B.,  *75 

—  John, 75 

—  Leicester,  75 

—  Mary  B.,  *75 

—  Mary  (Hnbbard),  74 

—  Oliver.  77 

—  Rebecca,  75 

—  Rebecca  (— ?)  Waldo,  75 


Grosvenor,  Sarah,  *75 

—  Zeruiah,  *75 

—  Zeruiah  (Payson),  77 
Haigar,  Benton  Merritt,  77 

—  Mary  Louise  (Hubbard),  77 
Hammett,  A bbie  Melissa.  *78 

—  Carrie,  *78 

—  Edward  Hubbard,  *7S 

—  Ida  May  (Wood).  7S 

—  Katie  Helen.  *76 

—  Maria  Emeline.  *78 

—  Nellie  Lawton,  *78 

—  Olive  Priscella,  *78 

—  Philena  Louisa  (Hubbard),  7f 

—  Theodore,  78 

—  Theodore  Erastus,  *78 
Hiscock,  Emma,  *78 

—  Eugene,  *78 

—  George.  *78 

—  Maria  (Hubbard),  78 

—  Mary,  *78 


INDEX. 


487 


Hiscock,  William.  *7S 
Holmes,  John.  74 

—  Kachel  (Hubbard),  74 
Hubbard,  Abbie,  78 

—  Abbie  (Young),  78 

—  Albeit,  76 

—  Albert  Charles,  70 

—  Alexander,  75 

—  Alvin.  78 

—  Amelia,  78 

—  Ann  Eliza  (Wood),  78 

—  Anna  (Catlin),  75 

—  Anna  (Rosseau),  78 

—  Anne,  75 

—  Annie  Hampton,  77 

—  Aurelia  (Plumb)  Robinson,  77 

—  Benjamin,  75,  77,  78 

—  Benjamin  t'ayson,  77 

—  Callie  (Edwards).  78 

—  Calvin,  78 

—  Carman  (de  la  Milla),  78 

—  Caroline,  76 

—  Carrie  Maria.  78 

—  Catharine,  76 

—  Charles  Williams,  76 

—  Charlotte.  76 

—  Charlotte  Eunice,  7S 

—  Charlotte  Julia,  77 

—  Charlotte  (Wright).  77 

—  Chloe  (—  ?)  Eldridge,  77 

—  Daniel  Sprague,  78 

—  Ebenezer,  78 

—  Edward  Hill,  78 

—  Eliza  Ann,  76 

—  Eliza  (Swann),  78 

—  Elizabeth,  75 

—  Elizabeth  (—  ?),  75 

—  Ellen  Rebecca,  76 

—  Emma  (Gould),  76 

—  Ernest,  76 

—  Ethel  May,  78 

—  Ethel  (Reed),  75 

—  Eunice,  78 

—  Faith  Wadsworth  (Silliman),  77 

—  Fanny,  76 

—  Filenii,  78 

—  Frank,  76 

—  George,  7S 

—  Grace  Lilian,  78 

—  Grosvenor  Silliman,  77 

—  Hannah,  75 

—  Hannah  (Brayton),  78 

—  Harriet,  78 

—  Harriet  Trumbull,  77 

—  Harriett  Grosvenor,  77 

—  Henrietta  Whitney,  77 

—  Henriette  Chauncey,  77 

—  Henry,  76,  7S 

—  Henry  Calvin,  7S 

—  Henry  Noble,  78 

—  Henry  Seward,  76 

—  Henry  Wright,  77 

—  Hester,  78 

—  Hiram  Bosworth,  75 

—  Hope  Ann  Eliza,  78 

—  Ida  Olive,  78 

—  Jeremiah,  78 


Hubbard,  Jessee,  75 

—  John,  74,  75,  77,  78 

—  John  Henry,  75 

—  Jonas,  75 

—  Joseph,  75,  76 

—  Joseph  Augustus,  75 

—  Julia  A.,  77 

—  Julia  Maria,  77 

—  Lois  (Williams),  76 

—  Lucy,  75,  76 

—  Lucy  (Spaulding),  76 

—  Lucy  (Starr),  75,  76 

—  Lucy  Starr,  76 

—  Luther,  75 

—  Lydia,  7S 

—  Lydia  Ann  (Hale),  78 

—  Marguerite,  78 

—  Maria,  78 

—  Maria  Olive,  78 

—  Maria  (Rice),  7S 

—  Marietta  (Arnold),  78 

—  Martha  (— ?),  75 

—  Mary.  74.  75 

—  Mary  (Browne).  7S 

—  Mary  Catharine  (Schuyler),  77 

—  Mary  Hurst  (Gladding),  76 

—  Mary  Louise,  77 

—  Mary  (Noble),  78 

—  Mary  ( Peek),  78 

—  Mary  Schuyler,  77 

—  Mary  Snow,  76 

—  Mary  (Tanner),  78 

—  Mary  (Young),  78 

—  Molly,  78 

—  Mo>es,  75 

—  Olive,  75 

—  Olive  (Hill),  78 

—  Oliver  Payson,  77 

—  Parley,  75 

—  Philena,  7S 

—  Philena  Louisa,  78 

—  Polly,  78 

—  Prudence.  75 

—  Rachel,  74 

—  Rebecca,  74 

—  Rebecca  (Wells?),  74 

—  Reuben,  78 

—  Rhuhainah,  78 

—  Samuel,  76 

—  Samuel  Starr,  76 

—  Samuel  William,  76 

—  Sarah.  74,  78 

—  Sarah  (Barker),  73 

—  Sarah  (Derby),  78 

—  Saunna  (Clark).  77 

—  Simeon,  76 

—  Simeon  Carew.  76 

—  Stephen,  75,  77 

—  Stephen  Grosvenor,  77 

—  Susan,  Maria  (Park),  *76 

—  Susannah,  75 

—  Susannah  (Cady),  75 

—  Sybil,  75 

—  Thankful,  75 

—  Thomas,  75 

—  Timothy,  75 

—  Virtue,  78 


Hubbard,  Virtue  (Clark).  78 

—  Willard,  75,  76 

—  Willard  Gladding,  76 

—  William,  76,  77.  78 

—  William  Augustus,  78 

—  William  Edwards,  78 

—  William  Grosvenor,  77 

—  William  Harrison,  78 

—  William  Wright,  77 

—  Winifred,  78 

—  Zeruiah  (Grosvenor),  77 
Hubert,  John.  74 
Jenkins,  Canfield,  77 

—  Edward  Canfield,  *77 

—  Julia  Maria  (Hubbard),  77 

—  Mary  Hubbard,  *77 
Jenner,  Charles  D.,  78 

—  Maria  Emeline  (Hammett),  *7S 
Kiet,  Hester  (Hubbard),  7> 

—  Leonard,  7^ 
Lawton,  Carr.  76 

—  Charles,  *76 

—  Lewis  O,  *76 

—  Lucy  Starr  (Hubbard),  76 
Martin.  George.  7s 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  78 
Millspaugh,  E.  Kirby,  78 

—  Grace  Lilian  (Hubbard),  7S 
Park.  Applefon.  76 

—  Eliza  Ann  (Hubbard),  76 

—  Susan  Maria,  *7ti 

Perry,  Hannah  (Hubbard),  75 
Plumb,  Aurelia  (Bowers),  77 

—  William,  77 
Seymour,  Alfred,  7S 
—"Eunice  (Hubbard),  78 
Sherman,  Amelia  (Hubbard),  78 

—  Stephen,  7> 
Silliman,  Benjamin,  77 

—  Harriet  (Trumbull ),  77 

Smith,    Henriette    Chauncey     (Hub- 
bard), 77 

—  J.  Otis.  77 

—  Ruth,  77 

Starr,  Annie  (Bushnell),  75 

—  Samuel,  75 
Steele,  Edward  H.,  78 

—  Hope  Ann  Eliza  (Hubbard).  73 
Townsend,  Amelia  (Hubbard),  78 

—  Samuel,  78 
Warren,  Betsey,  *75 

—  Delight,  *75 

—  Ephraim.  75 

—  Isaac,  *75 

—  John.  *75 

—  Susannah  (Hubbard),  75 

—  Thankful.  *75 

—  Wealthy,  *75 

—  William,  *75 
Whitney.  Joseph,  75 

—  Sybil  (Hubbard).  75 
Williams.  Mary  (Snow),  76 

—  Seth,   76 

Young,  Maria  Olive  (Hubbard),  78 

—  Schuyler,  78 

—  William,  *78 


DESCENDANTS    OP    PHIL.IP    HUBBARD,    OF    KITTERY,    ME. 


Andrews,  Eliza,  *113 

—  Ira,  *m 

—  James,  *11:! 

—  Leonard,  *113 

—  Lucv,  *113 

—  Mary,  *113 

—  Ruth  (Hubbard),  113 
At.vood,  Sarah  (Hubbard),  110 
Averell,  Az.iviah,  Ki7 

—  Sarah  (—5),  107 
Bartlett,  Nathan,  107,  109 


Bean,  Elizabeth,  *107 

—  Huldah,  *107 

—  Jeremiah.  *108 

—  John,  *UI7.  116 

—  Joseph.  *K)7 

—  Lewis,  107 

—  Mary,  *107 

—  Mary  (Austin)  Sevwood,  107 

—  Mary  (Hubbard  ),' 101,  107,  108,  116 
Boothby,  Emma.  *12() 

—  Hannah   Fogg  (Hubbard),  119,  ISO 


Boothby,  Samuel,  120 
Bourn,  Abieail    or    "Nabby"   (Hub- 
bard), 110 

—  Isaac,  IIS 

—  John,  Jr.,  116 

—  Olive,  *116 

■ —  Samuel.  *1 16 

—  Susan  (— ?),  118 

Bradford,    Abigail    Edwards     (Hub- 
bard). 114 

—  Abigail  (Emerson),  114 


488 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Bradford,  Daniel,  114 

—  William  P.,  114 

Bragdon,    Alice    (Wheelwright)  Par- 
sons-Eaton-Hubbard,  118 

—  Thomas,  118 

Brooks,  Sarah  (Hubbard)  Atwood,  110 
Brown,    Honour  (Hubbard- Williams) 
Foss,  113 

—  LarkinD.,  113 

Buffum,  Dorcas  (Hubbara),  114,  lib 
Burnham.  William,  112 
Butland,  Daniel,  119 

—  Polly  (— ?),  1W 

Butler,  Abigail  (Pugsley),  113 

—  Moses,  113 
Card,  Betty,  *107 

—  Hannah  (Simpson),  10 ( 

—  Hepzibah.  10" 

—  Joseph,  *107 

—  Mary,  *107 

—  Mary  (Winchester),  10T 

—  Patience  (Hubbard),  104,  107 

—  Thomas,  107 

—  William,  107 

Chadbourne,  Lydia  (Cheney)  Hubbard. 
116 

—  Sally  (Butler),  113 

—  Went  worth,  113 
Chaney.  Benjamin,  116 

—  Eunice  (Hubbard),  116 
Chickering,  Abigail  Heard  (Hubbard), 

109 

—  Benjamin.  109 
Cilley,  Leon  Henry,  113 

—  Mabel  (Hubbard),  113 
Clark,  Dorcas  (Hubbard),  118 

—  Nathaniel,  118 
Clements,  Moses,  112 
Cole,  Nicholas,  108 
Conney,  Benjamin,  113 

—  Sarah  (Roberts),  113 
Cook,  George,  114 

—  John,  114 

—  Keziah  (Hubbard),  111    ,  _.. 

—  Nancy  Isabelle  (Simpson),  *114 

—  Sarah  (Flower),  114 
Curtis,  John,  107 

—  Priscilla(—  ?),  107 
dishing.  John.  112 
Davis,  Mary  (Hubbard),  109 
Dennett,  John  A.,  110 
Donnell,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  lib 

—  Anna,  *118 

—  Benjamin,  *118 

—  Eliza,  *118 

—  Henry  D.,*118 

—  James,  *118 

—  John,  *118 

—  Mary,  *118 

—  Miriam  S.,  *118 

—  Oliver,  *118 

—  Samuel,  *1 18 
Eaton,  Jeremiah  M.,  118 
Ellis,  Ivorv,  *H3 

—  Paul,  113 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  113 

—  William,  *113 

Emery,  Abigail  (Simpson),  110 

—  Ann  (Hodgdon),  108 

—  Betsey  (Simpson),  110 

—  Daniel,  111 

—  Elizabeth,  103 

—  Elizabeth  (-  ?),  103 

—  Elizabeth  (Bean),  *107 

—  Huldah  (Bean),  *107 
— Ichabod,  *111 

—  James,  103 

—  Job,*110,  111 

—  John,  *110 

—  Joseph,  *110,  *111,  U2 

—  Lois  (Stacy),  111 

—  Martha  (Lord),  107 

—  Mary,  *110 


Emery,  Mary  (Hodgdon),  111 

—  Mary  or    "  Polly  "  (Hubbard),   110, 

111 

—  Matilda  (Nason),  110,  111 

—  Mehitable  (Stacy),  111 

—  Molly.  *11U 

—  Polly,  *111 

—  Polly  (Hubbard),  111 

—  Sarah,  *1 10 

—  Sarah    (Hodgdon)    Hubbard,  110, 

111 

—  Simon,  107 

—  Zecheriah,  103.  107 
Emmons,  Abigail  (Hubbard),  114 

—  Obadiah,  114 
Farnham,  Daniel,  107 

—  Hannah,  107 

—  Joshua,  107 

—  Patience  (Hubbard)  Card,  104,  10  < 

—  Zebediah,  107 
Ford,  Adeline,  *  1 13 

—  Caroline,   *113 

—  Honour,  *113 

—  Honour  (Hubbard),  113 

—  John,  *H3 

—  Miles,  113 

—  Porter,  *U3 
Foss,  Benjamin,  113 

—  Honour  (Hubbard)  Williams,  113 
Gage,    Elizabeth  (Roberts)   Hubbard, 

108 

—  John,  108 

—  Jonathan,  108 

—  Moses,  10^ 

—  William,  108 

Getchell,  Jane  (Hubbard),  117 

—  Nehimiah,  117 
Gillpatrick,  Daniel,  *116 

—  Dimon,  *116 

—  Mary  Heard  (Hubbard),  116 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  116 

—  James.  116 

—  Joshua,  116 

—  Richard,  116 

—  Sally,  *116 
Gooch,  Samuel,  117 

—  Sarah  (—?),  117 

—  William,  118 
Goodwin,  Aaron,  111 

—  Abigail  (Hubbard),  111 

—  Daniel,  103 

—  Ebenezer,  111 

—  Elizabeth  (Goodwin),  112 

—  John,  112 

—  Margaret  (Spencer),  103 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  111 
Gorges,  Fernando,  109 
Gould,  Anna  (—?),  107 

—  Zacheus,  107 
Gowan,  James,  118 

—  Lois  (—?),  118 
Heard.  Abigail,  108 

—  Dorcas,  10s 

—  James,  108 

—  Jane,  108 

—  Jane  (Cole)  Littlefield,  108 

—  John,  108.  109 

—  Mary,  108 

—  Phebe,  108 

—  Phebe(  — ?),  108 

—  Shuah,  108 
Hobbs,  Nathaniel,  110 

—  Patience  (Nowell),  110 
Hodgdon,  Hannah  (Hubbard),  111 

—  John,  111.  112 

Hood,  Mary  (Hubbard),  107 

—  William.  107 
Home,  Albert.  *112 

—  Gershom,  *112 

—  Jesse,  112 

—  Jesse  R„  *112 

—  Lydia,  *112 

—  Lydia  (Roberts),  112 


Home,  Martha,  *112 

—  Sally  Tibbetts  (Hubbard),  112 

—  Sarah,  *112 

—  Wesley,  *112 
Howe,  Isaac,  107 
Hubart,  John,  102 

—  Joseph,  102 

—  Philip,  102 

Hubbard,  Aaron,  104,  107,  111 

—  Abigail,  111,  113,  114,  1  IT,  118 

—  Abigail  or  •'Nabby,"  116 

—  Abigail  Edwards,  114 

—  Abigail  (Heard),    107.  lllS,  109,  114 

—  Abigail  Heard.  Iu9,  119 

—  Abigail  (Hearl),  110 

—  Abigail  (Jenness),  111 

—  Abigail  (Spencer),  113 

—  Achsah  (Palmer).  113 

—  Adelaide  (Wilcox),  120 

—  Albert,  114 

—  Alice  (Hart).  119 

—  Alice  (Wheelwright),   Parsons-Ea- 

ton, 118 

—  Allen,  119 

—  Alma,  113 

—  AlmiraH.,110 

—  Almira  (Hayes),  110 

—  Alonzo,  112 

—  Amanda,  112,  113 

—  Ann  (Gowan),  118 

—  Anna.  119 

—  Asa,  116 

—  Benjamin,  110,  117,  118,  119 

—  Benjamin  Franklin,  107 

—  Bethiah,  116 

—  Betsey,  116,  118 

—  Calvin,  112 

—  Caroline,  117 

—  Carrie,  119 

—  Catharine  (Butland),  119 

—  Charity  (Clements),  112 

—  Charles,  112,  117 

—  Clinton  Peary,  119 

—  Cordelia,  119 

—  Daniel,  111 

—  Daniel  Brackett,  120 

—  Diamond,  117 

—  Dimon,  117 

—  Dorcas,  111.  114.  116,  118,  119 

—  Dorcas  (—?),  Ill 

—  Dorcas  (  Maxwell).  117 

—  Doicas  (Shapleigh),  109 

—  Dorothy  (Couzens),  117 

—  Dudlev,  113 

—  Eben,  111 

—  Eliza  (Averell),  H>7 

—  Elizabeth,  104,  10s,  110,  112 

—  Elizabeth  (Goodwin)  Emery,   103, 

108 

—  Elizabeth  (Lake),  117 

—  Elizabeth  Lake,  117 

—  Elizabeth  (Nason),  111 

—  Elizabeth  (Roberts),  108,  109 

—  Elizabeth  Tibbetts,  113 

—  Elnathan,  107 

—  Elwin.  119 

—  Elwin  Thomas,  119 

—  Emily,  119 

—  Emily  H.,  110 

—  Ephraim,  119 

—  Erastus,  120 

—  Esther  (Wentworth),  119 

—  Eunice,  116,  119 

—  Eva,  114 

—  Fannie,  113 

—  Fanny,  119 

—  Frances  Jane,  113 

—  Frances  (Parsons).  Ill 

—  Frank  Allen,  120 

—  George,  113 

—  George  Henry.  114 

—  George  Philbrook,  117  ^ 

—  George  Washington,  107,  113 


INDEX. 


4*9 


Hubbard,  Hannah,  111,  116,  117,  118, 
119 

—  Hannah  (Chadbourne),  113 

—  Hannah  (Day),  117 

—  Hannah  Fogg,  119 

—  Hannah  (Hobbs),  117 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard)  Pike,  119 

—  Hannah  (Neal),  114,  117 

—  Hannah  (Phi  mm  err),  109,  112 

—  Hannah  Pluramer.  112 

—  Hannah  (Sewcll)  Gooch,  117 

—  Hannah  (Stiles),  113 

—  Harriet  (Wingate),  113 

—  Hattie,  120 

—  Heard,  116,  117 

—  Henry,  112 

—  Henry  H.,  119 

—  Henry  Hyde,  120 

—  Hepzibah.  Ill 

—  Honour,  113 

—  Honour  (Roberts),  112 

—  Humphrey  Gould,  107 

—  Ichabod,  110.  Ill,  112,  113 

—  Ida  (Fessenden),  119 

—  Ida  Isabelle.  113 

—  Irene  (Averell),  10T 

—  Isabella,  113 

—  James,  Hl7.  109,  111,  112,  116,  117, 

IIS,  119 

—  James  G.,  119 

—  James  Roberts,  112 

—  Jane,  109,  116,  117 

—  Jane  (Abbott),  120 

—  Jane  (Pike),  112 

—  Jared  Perkins,  113 

—  Jemima  (Stewart),  117 

—  Jeremiah,  117 

—  John,  104.  107,  108,  110,  111,  112. 

113,  117,  118 

—  John  Allen,  119 

—  John  Brown,  ln7 

—  John  Heard,  109,  114,  119 

—  John  Philip.  112,  113 

—  John  Wesley,  117 

—  Jonathan.  Ill 

—  Joseph,  102,  103,  108,  109,  111,  112, 

117,  118,  119 

—  Joseph  Tibbetts.  112 

—  Joshua.  109.  117,  118,  119 

—  Joshua  Roberts,  112 

—  Keziah.  Ill 

—  Lansing  H,  119 

—  Laura,  113 

—  Lavina,  118 

—  Leman,  119 

—  Leroy.  110 

—  Lodusky  Malvenah,  113 

—  Lois,  110 

—  Louisa  (Gromme8),  120 

—  Lovey  (Butler)  Marsh,  113 

—  Lucy  (Ricker),  111 

—  Lucy  (Winn),  118 

—  Luella,  113 

—  Lydia,  107 

—  Lydia  (Cheney),  116 

—  Lvdia  (Goodwin),  112 

—  Lydia  (Small),  116 

—  Mabel,  113 

—  Martha  (Nason),  111 

—  Mary,  HIT,  109,  110,  114,  116,  11", 

118,  119 

—  Mary  (— ?),  107 

—  Mary  (Bean),  *107,  *116 

—  Mary  (Curtis)  Howe,  107 

—  Mary  Elizabeth,  113 

—  Mary  (Gooch).  117 

—  Mary  Heard,  116 

—  Mary  Jane  (Mason),  119 

—  Mary  Linda  (Clark),  119 

—  Vary  (Littlefield),  117 

—  Mary  Pease.  120 

—  Mary  or  "Polly."  110,  111 

—  Mary  (Redington),  107 


Hubbard,  Mehitable,  107,  119 

—  Mehitable  (Underwood),  111 

—  Meribah  (Littlefield).  116 

—  Moses,  104,  107.  108,  109,  110,  111, 

112,  113.  114.  117 

—  Moses  Paul,  110 

—  Nancy,  112,  117 

—  Nancy  (Clements),  112 

—  Nathaniel,  110,  117 

—  Noah,  116 

—  Oscar  Joseph,  119 

—  Pamelia  Wesley  (Philbrook),  117 

—  Patience,  104,  107 

—  Patience  (Varnev)  Furbush,  112 

—  Patty,  111 

—  Paul  Richmond,  114 

—  Phebe,  118 

—  Phebe  (—?),  117 

—  Philip,  102,  103,  104,  108,  109,  110, 

111,  112,  113 

—  Polly,  111,  116 

—  Priscilla  (Bourn),  US 

—  Rebecca  (Bell),  112 

—  Rebecca  (Gould),  107 

—  Reuben,  116 

—  Richard,  111 

—  Rufus,  117 

—  Rufus  Peabody,  117 

—  Ruth,  113 

—  Ruth  (Allen),  119 

—  Ruth  Allen,  119 

—  Sally,  117,  118 

—  Sally  (Gooch),  117 

—  Sally  (Hobbs).  110 

—  Sally  (Hodgdon),  113 

—  Sally  (Hodgdon)  Emery,  112 

—  Sally  (Paul),  118 

—  Saily  Tibbetts,  112 

—  Samuel,  111.  116,  117,  118 

—  Samuel  Faiifield,  117 

—  Samuel  Tibbetts,  113 

—  Sarah,  110,  111,  112,  113,  117 

—  Sarah  Ann.  114 

—  Sarah  Bradbury  (Lord),  119 

—  Sarah  (Dunlap),  112 

—  Sarah  (Emery),  111,  112 

—  Sarah  Holly,  112 

—  Sarah  (Nason),  110,  111 

—  Sarah  (Tibbetts),  112 

—  Seth,  118 

—  Silas,  119 

—  Simeon  Pease,  120 

—  Small,  116 

—  Sophia  (Burnham),  112 

—  Stephen.  Ill 

—  Susan  (Libby),  119 

—  Susan  Wingate  (Conney),  113 

—  Tabitha(— ?),  117 

—  Thomas,  112 

—  Thomas  Lord,  119 

—  Timothy,  112 

—  Warwick,  109,  114,  117 

—  Wellington,  119 

—  Wentworth.  Chadbourne,  113 

—  William,  li>7,  112. 116, 117 

—  William  Henry.  120 

—  William  P..  llo 

—  William  Redington,  107 
Hussey,  Hannah  (Hubbard),  116 

—  Simeon.  116 
Jacobs,  Abigail,  *lls 

—  Abner,  *118 

—  Dorcas,  *118 

—  Ebenezer,  *118 

—  Hannah  ( Hubbard),  118 

—  James.  *118 

—  Joseph,  *118 

—  Joshua,   *118 

—  Samuel,  11  8 

Kimball.  Betsey  (Hubbard),  118 

—  Joshua,  IIS 

Lake,  Hannah  (Salter),  117 

—  John,  117 


Leaver,  Sarah  (Hubbard),  112 
Littlefield,  Joseph,  108 
Longsword.  William,  102 
Lonl.  Thomas,  119 

—  William  P..  110 
Marsh,  Daniel,  113 
Mason,  John,  1U9 
Mayberry,  Alice,  *120 

—  Hattie  (Hubbard),  120 
Merrill,  Hepzibah  (Hubbard),  111 
Nason,  Annie,  *120 

—  Hannah  Fogg  (Hubbard)  Boothby, 

120 

—  Hannah  Plummer  (Hubbard),  112 

—  Harry,  *120 

—  Hope,  112 

—  Joshua,  120 

—  Nathan,  111 

—  Polly  (Emery),  111 

—  Sarah,  *120 

Neal,  Andrew,  114,  116 

—  Dorcas  (—  ?),  114 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  110 

—  Jane  (Hubbaid),  116 

—  John,  110.  116 

—  Patience  (Johnson),  110,  116 
Noyes,  Enoch,  118 

—  Henry  Dearborn,  113 

—  Mary  (Homans),  113 

—  Olive  Elizabeth  (Simpson),  *113 
Owen,      Hannah     Fogg      (Hubbard) 

Boothbv-Nason,  119,  120 

—  John,  120 
Parsons,  Timothy,  118 
Philbrook,  Daniel,  117 

—  Pamelia  (Gunnison),  117 
Pike,  Dolly,  *116 

—  Hannah,  *116 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  116 

—  John,  116 

—  John  Judson,  *116 

—  Lydia,  *116 
Redington.  Daniel.  104,  *107 

—  Dorcas,  *106,  107 

—  Eliphalet,  *107 

—  Elizabeth  (— ?).  104 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  104 

—  Jacob,  104,  *107 

—  Phebe,  *107 

Robert,  Duke  of  Normandy,  102 
Roberts,  Abigail,  *113 

—  Abigail  (Hubbard).  113 

—  Betsey,  *113 

—  Elizabeth  (—  ?),  108 

—  Hubbard,  *113 

—  John.  *113 

—  Joseph,  108,  *113 

—  Joshua,  112,  *113 

—  Mark,  *113 

—  Ruth  (  — ?),  112 

—  Tristram,  *113 
Rollo  the  Dane.  102 

Rowe,  Carrie  Emma  (Simpson),  *114 

—  William  E.,  114 

Sanborn,  Emily  H.  (Hubbard).  110 
Sedgley,  John,  108 

—  Mary  (Hubbard)  Bean,  108 
Shapleigh,  Nicholas,  109 
Simpson,  Abigail  (Goodwin),  110,  113 

—  Anna.  *114 

—  Carrie  Emma,  *114 

—  Charles  Sumner,  *114 

—  Flora  Belle  (Brackett),  114 

—  George  Albert,  *114 

—  John,  113 

—  John  Frank,  *114 

—  Mary  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  113 

—  Mary  Ella,  *114 

—  Matilda  (Conley).  114 

—  Nancy  Isabelle,  *  114 

—  Olive  Elizabeth,  *113 

—  Rosanna,  *114 

—  Theophilus.  110,  113 


490 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Smith,  Noah,  112 

Spencer,  Patience  (—  ?),  103 

—  Thomas,  103 

Stacy,  George  Thomas,  *119 

—  James  Go  wan,  *119 

—  Sally  (Hubbard),  US 

—  Thomas  C,  118.  119 
Stevens,  Abigail,  tllS 

—  Anna,  *118 

—  Ebenezer,  *11S 

—  Jeremy,  118 

—  Louisa.  *11S 

—  Phebe  (Hubbard),  118 

—  Rnfus,  *118 

—  Stephen,  lis 

—  Theodore,  *11S 
Stimson,  Josiah,  117 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  117 
Stone,  Daniel,  103 


Stone,  Patience  (Goodwin),  103 
Tibbetts,  Elizabeth  (Hussey),  112 

—  Joseph.  112 
Tripp,  Samuel,  117 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  117 
Tucker,  Hugh,  Jr..  ll)9 

—  Jane  (Hubbard).  109 
Varney,  Humphrey,  112 

Viles,  Almira  H.  (Hubbard),  110 
Webster,  Frances  Jane  (Hubbaid),113 

—  Millard  F.,  118 

Wentworth.  Elizabeth  Tibbetts  (Hub- 
bard), 113 

—  Levi  H.,  113 

Weymouth,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  108 

—  Timothy.  108 
Wheelwright,  Joseph,  118 

—  Mary  (— ?),  118 
William  the  Conqueror,  102 


Williams,  Edward,  *113 

—  Emma.  *113 

—  Hoit.  113 

—  Honour  (Hubbard),  113 

—  James,  *113 
Wingate,  Daniel,  113 

—  Sabina  (Tibbets),  113 
Wise,  Betsey,  *117 

—  Daniel,  116,  *117 

—  George,  *117 

—  Hannah,  *117 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  116 

—  James.  116 

—  Jeremiah.  116 

—  John,  *117 

—  Mary,  *117 

Young.  Betty  (Card),  *107 

—  Johnson, 107 


DESCEXDA1VTS    OF    RICHARD    HUBBARD,    OP    SALISBURY,    MASS. 


Allen,  Ann  (Goodale),  S6 

—  James,  92 

—  Joseph,  90 

—  Martha  (Hubbard),  90 

—  William,  86 
Bacon,  Rev.  John,  93 
Bigelow,  Alpheus,  Jr.,  94 

—  Mary  Ann  Hubbard  (Townsend), 

t'.M 
Bordman,  Andrew,  94 

—  Marv  (Townsend),  *93,  94 

—  Sarah,  94 

Bowbridge-Brown.  Thomas,  89 
Carleton,  Henry,  91 

—  Sophia  (Hubbard),  91 
Case,  Eliza  (Hubbard),  92 

—  William,  92 
Chenery,  Henry,  86 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  86 
Conant,  Dorcas  (Hubbard),  91 

—  John,  91 
Cook,  Charles,  *91 

—  Eliza,  *91 

—  John.  *91 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  91 

—  Orchard,  91 

—  Wesley,  *91 
Cooper,  Samuel,  93 
Copeland,  David,  92 

—  Joanna  (Copeland),  92 

—  Justin  M..  *92 

—  Olive.  *92 

Copley.  John  Singleton,  92 
Currier,  Emery,  95 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  95 

—  John, 95 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  95 
Gushing,  Caleb,  89.  90 
Dayton,  Lodicy  (Hubbard),  86 

—  William,  SO 
Earl  of  Carlisle,  S5 
Eaton,  Abraham,  90 

—  Eleazer,  *90 

—  F.  B.,  85 

—  Hannah  (Hubbard),  86 

—  Thankful  (  Hubbard),  90 

—  Thomas.  SO 
Eliot,  Dr.  Andrew,  93 
Emmons,  Judith  (Hubbard),  89 

—  Obadiah,  S9 
Evans,  Elijah.  95 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  95 
Fayerweather,  Sarah  (Hubbard),  93, 

94 

—  Thomas,  93.  94 
Fitts,  Lieut.  Abram,  94 
Gerrish.  Anna  (Thompson),  *89 

—  Joseph.  89 

Goodale,  Dorothy  (—  ?),  86 


Goodale,  Richard,  86 
Goodladd,  Richard,  85 
Goodwin,  Governor,  89 
Gray,  Harrison,  92 
Green,  Elizabeth,  93 
Hancock,  John,  92 
Haskell.  Andrew,  90 

—  Dorcas,  *90 

—  Dorcas  (Hubbard),  90 

—  Dorothy  (Hubbard),  90 

—  Isaac,  90 

—  Jemima  (Hubbard),  S9 

—  Thankful.  *90 

—  William.  89 

Hawkins,  Alice  (Hubbard),  95 

—  James,  95 

Hotten,  John  Camden,  85 
Hubbard.  Abigail.  91 

—  Abigail  (Davis),  90.  91 

—  Abigail  (Taylor),  91 

—  A  bra,  94 

—  Ada,  95 

—  Adeline  (Eaton),  95 

—  Alice,  95 

—  Alice  (Gray),  86 

—  Anna,  89 

—  Anne.  ."-6.  91 

—  Annie.  95 

—  Arthur.  86 

—  Benjamin,  86.  91,  94,  95 

—  Bertha,  SO 

—  Bertha  (Goldsmith),  86 

—  Butler,  86 

—  Captain,  86 

—  Caroline  (Robie),  95 

—  Catharine  (Gray),  86 

—  Charles,  95 

—  Comfort,  89 

—  Cyrus,  86,  92 

—  Daniel,  86 

—  Dorcas,  90,  91 

—  Dorcas  (Haskell).  90,  94 

—  Dorothv,  89,  90,  91 

—  Douglas,  85.  s6 

—  Edmund,  86 

—  Edward,  93,  95 

—  Eleazer.  89,  90,  94 

—  Elias,  95 

—  Elisha,  95 

—  Eliza,  92 

—  Klizabeth,  90.  91,  94.  95 

—  Elizabeth  (Brownl,  94 

—  Elizabeth  (Pierce).  90 

—  Elizabeth  (Webster),  91 

—  Emeline,  86 

—  Emeline  (DouglaRs),  86 

—  Emeline  Phillips,  95 

—  Emma  (Chandler),  95 

—  Eunice,  90 


Hubbard,  Frances  (Gan),  86 

—  Francis,  91 

—  George,  95 

—  Grace,  91,  95 

—  Greenleaf.  92 

—  Hannah.  86,  95 

—  Hannah  (Parker).  86 

—  Harriet  (Longford).  95 

—  Harriet  (Preston),  s6 

—  Henry,  95 

—  Isaac,  86 

—  Isabelle.  86 

—  James.  85 

—  Jane,  89,  90 

—  Jane  (Collensby),  89,  90 

—  Jeanette,  S6 

—  Jedediah,  91 

—  Jemima,  89 

—  Jeremiah,  86,  89,  90 

—  Joanna,  92 

—  Joanna  (Davis),  91 

—  John,  sti,  89.  90,  91,  92,  95 

—  John  Edward,  95 

—  John  Hills,  91 

—  Joseph,  86,  89,  90,  92,  93,  94,  95 

—  Joshua.  94,  95 

—  Josiar,  S6 

—  Judith,  89,  90 

—  Julia,  86 

—  Keziah,  89 

—  Letitia  (Parker),  95 

—  Lillie.  86 

—  Lodicy,  86 

—  Louis.  86,  95 

—  Louisa.  86 

—  Margaret,  91,  95 

—  Maria,  86 

—  Martha,  86,  S9,  90,  91 

—  Martha  (Allen).  86,  89 

—  Marv,  st!,  s9.  90,  91,  93,  94,  95 

—  Mary  (—  ?).  93 

—  Marv  (Hallock),  86 

—  Mary  (Jackson),  93 

—  Marv  (Pike),  94 

—  Mary  (Tuthill),  86 

—  Mehitable,  95 

—  Mercy,  90 

—  Mercy  (Johnson),  90 

—  Nancy,  91 

—  Nathaniel,  86 

—  Nellie,  95 

—  Olive,  86 

—  Olive  (Wilson),  91 

—  Olivia,  91 

—  Phebe,  86 

—  Pike,  95 

—  Richard,  85,  86,  89,  90,  91 

—  Robie,  95 

—  Sallie  (Stevens),  96 


INDEX. 


491 


Hubbard,  Sally.  94 

—  Samuel,  86,  95 

—  Sarah.  86,  91.  92,  94.  95 

—  Sarah,  (Bartlctt),  86 

—  Sarah  I  French),  95 

—  Sarah  (Robie),  95 

—  Sophia.  91 

—  Susan,  S6 

—  Susan  (Logan),  86 

—  Susan  (Rowe  .  95 

—  Susan  (Yates  |,  86 

—  Thankful.  89,  90,  94 

—  Thankful  (Bowbridge?)  Brown,  89, 

90 

—  Thomas,   86,  90,  92,  93,  94,  95 

—  Velina.  92 

—  Walter.  86 

—  William.  S6 

—  Zebina.  95 

Huse,  Mary  (Hubbard),  86 
Jackson,  Edward,  93 

—  Jonathan.  93 

—  Mary  (—  ?  .  93 
Langdon.  Elizabeth,  *>9 

—  Governor,  S9 

—  John,  *89 

—  Joseph,  *S9 

—  Marks.  *89 

—  Martha.  *89 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  86.  90 

—  Richard,  *89,  90 

—  Samuel,  *S9 

—  Thankful  (Hubbard),  89,  90 

—  Thomas,  *90 

—  Tobias,  -6,  *89,  90 

—  William,  *S9 

Lay,  Olive  (Copeland)  Paine,  *92 
Leonard,  Thankful  (Hubbard),  94 

—  Thomas,  94 


Libby,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  91 

—  John.  S9 

—  Keziah  (Hubbard),  S9 

—  Samuel,  91 
March,  John,  90 

—  Judith  (Hubbard).  90 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  90 
Marie,  Louis,  36 

—  Phebe  (Hubbard).  S6 
Mcintosh,  Olive  (Hubbard),  86 

—  Samuel.  86 

Messerve,  Jemima  (Hubbard),  89 

—  John.  89 
Meyers.  Frederic,  S6 

—  Susan  (Hubbard),  86 
Paine,  Colonel,  92 

—  Paine,  Olive  (Copeland),  *92 
Robbins,     Elizabeth     (Pierce)     Hub- 
bard, 90 

—  Nehemiah,  9  1 
Robie,  John.  95 
Rollins.  Henry  C,  *91 

—  Ichabod.  *91 

—  James.  91 

—  Joanna  H..  *92 

—  Mary  (Chadbourne).  92 

—  Nancy  (Hubbard),  91 

—  Sally  (Alley),  91 

—  Thomas  H.,  *92 

—  William,  *92 
Salter,  James.  -6 

—  Julia  (Hubbard).  86 
Sappington,  Alexis,  92 

—  Eliza  (Hubbard)  Case,  92 
Sawyer,  John,  90 

—  Martha  (Hubbard),  90 
Sherburne.  Eunice  (Hubbard),  90 

—  Joseph,  90 

Small,  Dorothy  (Hubbard),  91 


Small,  Samuel,  91 

Smith.  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  95 

—  Joel.  96 
Stark,  Colonel.  94 

Stevens.  Dorothy  (Hnbbard),  S9 

—  Hubbard,  *89 

—  John,  89,  91 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  91 
Stuart,  Grace  (Hubbard),  91 

—  Samuel,  91 
Thompson.  Anna.  *89 

—  Anna  (Hubbard),  89 

—  John,  *S9 

—  William.  *S9 
Townsend.  Esther  (Newell),  94 

—  James,  *94 

—  Mary,  94 

—  Mary  Ann  Hubbard,  t94 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  94 

—  Thomas  Hubbard.  93,  *94 

—  William  Blair,  93,  94 
True,  Joseph,  89 

—  Keziah  (Hubbard),  89 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  94 

—  Thomas,  94 
Tyng.  John,  92 

W'atson.  Joanna  H.  (Rollins),  *92 

—  Samuel,  92 
Weare,  John,  94 

—  Thankful  (Hubbard),  94 
Weeks,  Comfort  (Hubbard),  89 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  94 

—  Joshua,  89 

—  William,  Jr..  94 
White,  John.  90 

Wilkie.  Jeanette  (Hubbard),  86 

—  Samuel.  86 
Young,  David.  86 

—  Olive  (Hubbard)  Mcintosh,  86 


DESCEVDAXTS     OF    VIRGIVIA    HUBBARDS. 


Blair,  Abner,  62 

—  Louisa  J.  (Hubbard),  S2 

—  Lucinda,  *82 
Carter,  Jesse.  S3 

—  Louisa  J.  (Hubbard)  Blair,  82 

—  Nathaniel.  82 

—  Thomas.  So 
Coffin,  Tristram,  SI 
Copeland,  Edith  (Hubbard),  82 

—  Henry,  82 

Grove,  Anna  (Hubbard),  *'2 

—  Benjamin  H.,  82 

—  Caswell.  >2 
Clark  S2 

—  Everett  Floyd.  82,  83 

—  Thomas  C,  82 
Had  lev.  Abner.  SO 

—  Saliie  (Hubbard),  82 
Henley.  Elias.  81 
Herbeord,  Richard,  80 
Herberd,  John.  80 

—  William,  80 
Herbord.  Richard.  80 
Herbut.  Clement,  79 

—  John.  80 

—  Mary,  80 

—  Thomas  -0 
Hobday,  Edward,  80 
Hnbard,  James,  79 

—  Robert,  79 
Hubbard.  Abigail,  S3 

—  Abigail  (Coffin).  SI 

—  Abigail  (  Henshaw),  S2 

—  Alia,  83 

—  Ann.  81,  S4 

—  Ann  (Crews),  bl,  388 

—  Anna,  81,  82 

—  Asa,  84 

—  Barton.  83 


Hubbard,  Bathsheba  (Sanders).  S2 

—  Benjamin.  Hi.  s4 

—  Benjamin  Vestal,  S3 

—  Bvram  C,  82 

—  Caleb,  SI 

—  Catharine  (Day),  S2 

—  Charles.  SO 

—  Claude  Newman,  S3 

—  Daniel.  84 

—  Daniel  Campbell.  <} 

—  Daniel  Perkins,  S3 

—  David.   ^2 

—  Delia  (Bundy),  82 

—  Edith.  82 

—  Edward.  80 

—  Elias,  B2 

—  Eliza  A.  (Ballard),  82 

—  Elizabeth,  81 

—  Elizabeth  C,  83 

—  Elizabeth  (Hodges).  83 

—  Ellen  (Newman  1,  S3 

—  Emma  J.  (Woollen),  83 

—  George,  81.  SO 

—  George  Hixon,  S2 

—  Hardy,  81 

—  Harrison.  S3,  S4 

—  Henley  Harvey,  S3 

—  Henry,  79 

—  Homer,  s2 

—  Jacob, 81 

—  James  Sanders.  82 

—  James  Whitall,  S3 

—  Jane,  SI 

—  Jane  Abner,  82 

—  Jemima,  82 

—  Jeremiah,  81 

—  Jesse,  >2 

—  Jesse  Carter,  83 

—  Joanna  L..  Si 


Hubbard.  Joanna  Lawson  (Carter), 

—  John.  -0.  Si,  82,  64 

—  John  Nicholas,  S3 

—  John  S..  S2 

—  Joseph,  SI 

—  Josiah.  83 

—  Judith,  81 

—  Judith  (—':),  SI 

—  Judith  B.,  s  i 

—  Laura.  62 

—  Lemuel,  S2 

—  Louisa  J.  82 

—  Ludah,  S2 

—  Ludah  (Vestal),  82 

—  Mahala,  S2 

—  Malinda,  82 

—  Margaret.  82 

—  Margaret  (Gray),  82 

—  Martha.  81.  82 

—  Martha  Ann,  83 

—  Martha  J..  S2 

—  Martha  (Sanders),  81 

—  Mary.  SO.  83 

—  Mary  B.,  82 

—  Mary  J.,  82 

—  Mary  Jane  (Sutton),  83 

—  Mary  (Todd).  84 

—  Matthew.  79,  SO 

—  Mavilda.  82 

—  Moses.  S3,  84 

—  Moses  Allen,  S3 

—  Nancy,  82 

—  Nancy  (Shields),  82 

—  Nathan  E..  82 

—  Pauline  (Hudson),  82 

—  Rebecca  D.  P.,  S3 

—  Rhoda,  si 

—  Rhoda  V..  82 

—  Richard.  SO 


49  2 


HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Hubbard,  Robert,  79,  80 

—  Sadie  W.,  83 

—  Sahie,  82 

—  Sarah,  b'i 

—  Sarah  Filpot,  S3 

—  Sarah  (Patterson),  S2 

—  Susan  W.,  83 

—  Susannah,  81 

—  Thomas  Chalk'.ey,  82 

—  Thomas  D.,  81 

—  Tilghman,  82 

—  Walter,  S4 

—  William.  82,  84 

—  William  B.,  82 

—  William  G.,  81 

—  William  H.,  8=3 

—  William  W.,  83 


Hubbard,  Willie,  83 

—  Winifred  B.,  83 

—  Woodson,  SI 
Huberd,  Henry,  79,  80 

—  Matthew,  79,  SO 

—  Richard,  80 

—  Robert,  79 
Hubert,  Robert,  79,  SO 
Hubord,  John.  80 

—  William.  80 
Johnson,  Ashley,  *82 

—  Emeline,  *82 

—  George,  *82 

—  Louisa,  *S2 

—  Mahlon,  *'>2 

—  Martha  (Hubbard),  82 

—  Phillip,  82 


Penn,  William,  81 
Sanders,  Hezekiah.  81 
Spenser.  Alia  (Hubbard),  83 

—  B.  F.,  83 
Sumner.  Anna,  *82 

—  Martha  l  Hubbard),  S2 

—  Bailie,  *82 

Taylor/Anii  (Hubbard),  84,  451 

—  James,  84 
Vestal,  Benjamin,  82 

—  Eli,  82 

—  Jemima  (Hubbard).  S2 
(Ncwlin).  82 

Wilhite.  Rhoda  V.  (Hubbard),  S2 

—  William,  82 

Woollen,  William  Wesley,  83 


DESCENDANTS   OF    WILLIAM    HUBBARD    AND    ABIGAIL.    DUDLEY. 


Baylis,  Mary  (Hubbard),  265 

—  Samuel,  265 
Close,  Abraham,  265 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  265 
Colegrove,  Harriet  (Hubbard),  265 

—  John,  265 
Filkins,  John,  265 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  265 
Ford,  Emily  (Hubbard),  266 

—  Ransom,  266 

Frost,  Mary  (Hubbard),  266 

—  Stoddard,  266 

Groat,  Jerome  (Hubbard),  266 

—  Leonard,  266 
Hannon,  Cyrus,  265 

—  Frances  (Hubbard),  265 
Heusted,  Aaron,  265 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  265 
Hubbard,  Abigail.  264,  265 

—  Abigail  (Dudley),  264,  265 

—  Abigail  (Rose).  265 

—  Abraham,  265,  266 

—  Albert.  265,  266 

—  Alexander,  865,  266 

—  Alice  (Matthews),  266 

—  Allen.  2«5 

—  Amy  (Palmer),  266 

—  Andrew,  265 

—  Anne,  265 

—  Archibald,  265 

—  Augusta  (Knipe),  266 

—  Azubah,  265 

—  Caroline  (Daskam)  Smith,  265 

—  Charles.  266 

—  Charlotte  (Brown),  266 

—  Clarence,  266 

—  Claudius.  266 

—  Cornelia,  265,  266 

—  Daniel,  265 

—  Deliah  (Martin),  266 

—  Dickson,  265 

—  Eleanor,  265 

—  Elizabeth,  265 

—  Ellen,  266 

—  Elmaretta,  265 

—  Emily,  265,  266 


Hubbard,  Emily  (Eglee),  266 

—  Estelle,  265 

—  Eugene,  2t>ti 

—  Frances,  265 

—  Fred,  266 

—  Frederica,  266 

—  Frederick.  265 

—  Gabriel,  265 

—  George,  264.  265,  266 

—  Gillespie,  366 

—  Hannah,  2H5 

—  Hannah  (Dibble).  265 

—  Hannah  (June),  265 

—  Hannah  (Mead),  2*i."> 

—  Hannah  (Smith),  265 

—  Harriet,  265 

—  Harriet  (Schuermann),  265 

—  Harry,  266 

—  Harvey,  2K6 

—  Helen  (Edwards),  266 

—  Henry,  2*i5,  266 

—  Holly,  265 
_  Husted,  265 

—  Isaac,  266 

—  Jane,  265 

—  Jane  (Breasted),  265 

—  Jennie  (Brimlow),  266 

—  Jerome.  266 

—  John,  265 

—  Joseph,  266 

—  Julia,  265 

—  Julian,  265 

—  Lester,  266 

—  Lott,  265 

—  Lydia,  265 

—  Lydia  (Dickson),  265 

—  Lydia  (Lyon),  266 

—  Mabel,  266 

—  Margaret  (McFall),  266 

—  Mary,  265.  266 

—  Mary  (Bishop),  264 

—  Mary  (Heusted),  265 

—  Mary  (Johnson).  265 

—  Mary  (McKay),  2(55 

—  Mary  (Mead),  265 

—  Mary  (Quintard),  265 


Hubbard,  Maud.  266 

—  Mortimer,  2fi(i 

—  Napoleon   2'iii 

—  Nathaniel,  265 

—  Piatt,  265 

—  Prudence,  265 

—  Samuel,  265 

—  Sarah.  265,  266 

—  Sar»h  (Brundage).  266 

—  Sarah  (Holly),  265 

—  Sarah  (Jenkins).  265 

—  Sarah  (Wallace).  266 

—  Sarah  (Weed),  265 

—  Srephen.  26<i 

—  Therese  (Dohler).  265 

—  William,  264,  265,  266 
Ingersoll.  Levi,  265 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard).  265 
Jarrett,  Frederica  (Hubbard),  266 

—  William,  266 
Lane,  Daniel,  265 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  265 
Lockwood,  Henry,  2ti5 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  265 
Marshall.  Augustus,  265 

—  Cornelia  (Hubbard).  265 
Merrett,  Elmaretta  (Hubbard).  265 

—  Lewis.  265 

Miller,  Eleanor  (Hubbard),  265 

—  Nathaniel,  265 
Palmer,  John,  2('5 

—  Lydia  (Hubbaid).  265 
Putnam.  Gen.  Israel,  264 
Reed,  David,  265 

—  Ellen  (Hubbard),  266 

—  Henry,  266 

—  Prudence  (Hubbard),  265 
Reynolds.  Anne  (Hubbard).  265 

—  Jared.  265 

Smith,  Julia  (Hubbard),  265 

—  Lyman,  265 

Thompson,  Azubah  (Hubbard),  265 

—  Walter,  265 
Washburn,  Charles,  266 

—  Cornelia  (Hubbard),  266 


DESCENDANTS   OP   WILLIAM    HUBBARD,  OP    IPSWICH,    MASS. 


Adams,  Moses,  174 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  174 
Appleton.  Col.  John,  173,  174 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  173 

—  Francis,  173 
Balch.  Abigail.  *173 

—  Freeborn,  173 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  173 

—  Miriam.  *173 

—  Susanna,  *173 
Bradstreet,  Ann  (Dudley),  171 

—  Gov.  Simon,  171 


Brown   John,  174 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  174 
Clarke.  Elizabeth  (Williams),  172 

—  John,  170.  172 

—  Martha  (Saltonstall),  172 

—  Martha  (Whittingham),  172 

—  Samuel.  172 

—  William.  tl69.  172 
Cotton,  John.  172 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  172 
Dodge,  Abraham,  *173 

—  Jacob,  *1T3 


Dodge,  Mary,  *173 

—  Mary  (Dodge),  *173 

—  Nathaniel  Hubbard,  *173 

—  Prudence.  *173 

—  Richard  Hubbard,  *173 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  173 

—  William.  *173 

Drew,  Jemima  (Clarke),  172 

—  Robert,  172 

Dudley,  Gov.  Thomas.  171 
Edwards,  Abraham.  173 

—  Prudence  (Dodge),  *173  - 


INDEX. 


493 


Eyre.  John.  *169 

—  Maria.  *169 

—  Martha   (Hubbard)  Whittingham, 

169,  170 

—  Simon,  168,  170 

Ford.  Ann  (—':)  Scott,  170 

—  Thomas.  170 
Hubbard,  Anne,  170 

—  Catharine,  17-1 

—  Dudley,  174 

—  Elizabeth,  173 

—  Elizabeth  (Clarke).  172.  173 

—  John.  167,  16S,  169,  170,  171,  173, 

174 

—  Judith  (Knapp),  167,  168 

—  Lydia,  174 

—  Martha.  167,  169.  170,  174 

—  Mary,  167,  169,  170,  173,  174 

—  Mary  (Brown).  173 

—  Nathaniel,  167,  16S,  169,  170,  171, 

172.  173 

—  Oliver,  174 

—  Olivia  Sarah.  174 

—  Richard,  167,  168,  169.  171, 172,  173 

174 

—  Sarah,  171.  172,  173.  174 

—  Sarah  (Bradstreet),  171,  172,  174 


Hubbard.  Sarah  Sophia,  174 

—  Sarah  (Woodbury),  174 

—  Simon,  171,  172 

—  Sophia  (Dame i.  174 

—  William,  167,  16S,  169, 170, 171, 172, 

174 
Kimball,  Susanna  (Balch),  *173 
Knapp,  John,  167 

—  Martha  (Blosse).  167 
Lawrence,  John.  170 
Leech,  Billy,  174 

—  Lydia  (Hubbard),  174 
Mather,  Elizabeth,  173 

—  Elizabeth  (Clarke)  Hubbard,  172 

—  Increase,  173 

—  Rev.  Cotton,  172 

—  Samuel,  173 
Nason,  Augustus,  174 

—  Benjamin.  *174 

—  Charles,  174 

—  Dudley  Hubbard,  *174 

—  John  Fairfield,  174 

—  Lucia  Wells,  174 

—  Mary  Russell,  174 

—  Olivia  Sarah  (Hubbard),  174 

—  Sarah  White,  174 
Saltonstall,  Richard,  172 


Scott,  Ann  (— ?),  169 

—  Mary  (Hubbard).  169,  170 

—  Thomas,  *169,  170 
Symonds,  Abigail  (Balch),  *173 
Rogers,  Ezekiel,  *170 

—  John.  *170 

—  L.  (Paine),  170 

—  Margaret  (Crane),  170 

—  Martha.  170 

—  Mary  (Hubbard)  Scott,  170 

—  Nathaniel,  *170 

—  Samuel,  *170 

—  Timothy.  *170 
Ward,  Samuel,  171 

—  Sarah  (Bradstreet)  Hubbard,  171 
Whittingham.  Baruch,  169 

—  Daniel,  169 

—  Elizabeth.  *169 

—  John,  *169 

—  Judith,  *169 

—  Martha,  *169 

—  Martha  (Hubbard),  169 

—  Richard,  *169 

—  Samuel  Hough,  169 

—  William,  *169, 170 


DESCENDANTS    OP    REV.    WILLIAM    HUBBARD    AND    MARY    ROGERS. 


Andros.  Sir  Edmund,  182 
Archdale,  John.  1^3 
Babcock,  Adam,  190 

—  Martha  I  Hubbard).  190 
Beardsley,  William.  189 
Berry,  Anna  (Merriam),  188 

—  Thomas,  188 
Blake.  Agnes.  *194 

—  Benjamin  Sewall,  *194 

—  Elizabeth  Livermore  (Hubbard), 194 

—  Francis.  194 
Boit.  Edward  D.,  191 

—  Jane  (Hubbard).  191 
Booker,  Francis,  1>4 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard).  184 

Bradlev,   Eunice    OVhite)    Hubbard, 
187 

—  Joseph,  187 
Brown.  Daniel.  1S4 
Bushnell,  Ebenezer,  190 

—  Susan  (Hubbard),  190 
Chamberlain,  Eliza   Ann   (Hubbard), 

*18.) 

—  L.  P.,  189 

Chandler-Davis,  Anne  (Hubbard),  194 

—  Bancroft,  194 

—  Mabel.   *194 

—  Martha,  *194 
Coit,  John,  190 

—  Joseph,  191 

—  Lydia  (Lathrop),  191 
Cooper,  Alfred,  *187 

—  Anna,  *1S7 

—  Anna  (Hubbard),  1S7 

—  Jesse,  *187 

—  Russell,  *1S7 

Downing,  Margaret  (Pyncheon),  *184 

—  Nathaniel,  184 
Duncan,  Elbert  O.,  188 

—  Lucy  Chapline  (Hubbard),  188 
Elefrity,  Anaretta  (Hubbard),  188 

—  Emma  V.,  *1S8 

—  O.  K.,  188 
Eliot,  Andrew,  182 

—  John,  182 

Fanning,  Lucy  (Hubbard),  192 

—  Thomas,  192 
Gardiner.  John,  190 
Gillam,  Benjamin,  1~5 

—  Hannah  (Savage).  185 
Greene,  Benjamin,  190 


Greene,  Benjamin  D.,  190 

—  Elizabeth  (Gardiner),  19,1 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  190,  191 

—  Gardiner,  190 

—  John  Singleton  Copley.  191 

—  Martha  (Coit)  Hubbard,  190 

—  Mary  Anne,  *190 
|  —  Thomas,  190 

—  William  P.,  190 

Hawley,  Austin  Sturtevant,  192 

—  Emily  Lathrop  (Hubbard),  191,  192 
Havnes,  John,  184,  186 

—  Mabel  (Harlakenden),  186 
Hodgkins.  Abigail  (Pearce),  183 

—  John,  183 
Hough.  Alice,  tl89 

—  Ann  Amelia,  flS9 

—  Caroline.  +189 

—  Cornelia.  +189 

—  Ellen  Rebecca,  +188 

—  Emily  Smith,  +1S9 

—  Ezra  Stiles,  *+189 

—  Harriet  Eliza,  +1--9 

—  Hobart  Isaac,  +189 

—  Ira,  189 

—  IraH..  *1n9 

—  Isaac,  *ls9 

—  James,  +189 

—  Jane  Elizabeth,  +188 

—  Joel,  +188,  189 

—  Laura  Ann  (Johnson),  139 

—  Lucy,  +189 

—  Lucv  (Minor),  1S9 

—  Lyman  W.,  188 

—  Mary  A.,  *189 

—  Mary  Aurelia,  +189 

—  Marv  (Hubbard),  1S9 

—  Mary  P.  (Smith),  189 

—  Mary  (Rice),  *1^8 

—  Rosalie,  +189 

—  Ruth  Curtis  (Rice),  *188 

—  Silas  R.,  +188 

—  Susan  Albert,  +189 
Hubbard.  Abby  (Coit),  190 

—  Abby  (Williams).  190 

—  Abigail  (Heaton),  188 

—  Addie  Morrison.  191 

—  Adelaide  Sears  (McCulloch),  191 

—  Agnes,  188 

—  Alfred,  186 

—  Alice  (—  ?)  Deming,  192 


Hubbard.  Alice  Julia,  18S 

—  Alice  Winthrop,  192 

—  Amelia.  1S7 

—  Amos,  190 

—  Anaretta,  188 

—  Ann,  185,  186 

|  —  Ann  (Leverett),  184,  186 
|  —  Anna.  187,  188 

—  Anna  (Atwater),  187 
j  — Anna  Gilkeson,  188 

!  —  Anne,  185,  186,  194 
|  —  Anne  Gordon,  191 

—  Anne  (Jeffreys).  185 

—  Anne  Laurens  (Swann),  194 

—  Annie  McCulloch,  191 

—  Asenath,  188 

—  Asenath  (Dorman),   l->8 

—  Betsey,  1S9 

—  Caroline  (Thacher),  192 

—  Catharine,  192 

—  Charles,  190,  191,  192 

—  Charles  Dudley,  1!»2 

—  Charles  Thacher,  192 

—  Charles  Thomas,  189 

—  Charles  Townsend,  191.  192,  194 

—  Charles  Wells,  194 

—  Charlotte  (Blake),  191 

—  Charlotte  Wright,  194 

—  Chester  Dimock,  188 

—  Chester  Dorman.  18S 

—  Copley  Greene,  191 

—  Dana,  18S 

—  Daniel,  186,  190.  192 

—  David  Greene.  191 

—  David  Manwaring,  192 

—  Deborah  Gage  (Payson),  191 

—  Dolly  Cornelia,  1S9 

—  Edith,  191 

—  Eliza,  190,  191 

—  Eliza  (Chandler),  1!'0 

—  Eliza  Chaplin,  191 

—  Eliza  (Church),  1S9 

—  Eliza  Oliver  (Chaplin),  191 

—  Elizabeth,  185,  186,  189,  190,  191, 

192 

—  Elizabeth  Blair,  194 

—  Elizabeth  Blair  (Wells),  194 

—  Elizabeth  Greene,  192 

—  Elizabeth  (Hadden),  191 

—  Elizabeth  Livermore,  192.  194 

—  Elizabeth  (Patterson),  191 


494 


HUBBARD   HISTORY  AND   GENEALOGY. 


Hubbard.  Elizabeth  Perkins.  192 

—  Elizabeth  {—''.)  Stevens,  186,  1ST 

—  Elizabeth  (Tailer)  Nelsou,  165 

—  Ellen  PayBon.  191 

—  Emily  B.,  189 

—  Emily  Lathrop,  191 

—  Emma  (Lewi*).  188 

—  Emma  Lewis,  188 

—  Erastus,  189 

—  Ethel,  192 

—  Eugenie,  192 

—  Eunice  Jannett,  189 

—  Eunice  (Merriman),  189 

—  Eunice  (White),  187 

—  Ezra  Stiles,  189 

—  Frank,  1 1H 

—  Gardiner  Greene,  191,  192 

—  George,  191 

—  George  Boardman,  189 

—  George  Kausler,  192 

—  George  S..  189 

—  Gilbert,  192 

—  Gilbert  Harrison,  191 

—  Hannah  Ann  (Lake),  189 

—  Hannah  (Wiswall),  185 

—  Harriet.  191 

—  Harriet  Ann,  191,  192 

—  Helen  (Matchett),  192 

—  Helen  Rogers,  188 

—  Henry,  188,  191,  192 

—  Henry  Babcock,  192 

—  Henry  Baldwin,  188 

—  Henry  Dana,  18S 

—  Isaac,  187,  188.  189 

—  Isaac  Ives,  189 

—  Isabel  (Reed),  192 

—  James,  189,  190,  192 

—  Jane,  191,  192 

—  Jane  Ann,  1S9 

—  Jane  ( Beardsley),  189 

—  Jane  (Berry),  188 

—  Jane  (Parkinson),  191 

—  Joanna  (Perkins),  192 

—  John,  183,  184,  185,  186,  187,  188, 

189,  190,  191 

—  John  Parkinson,  191 

—  John  Peck,  188 

" —  John  Rogers,  188 

—  John  Stiles.  189 

—  Joseph.  191,  192 

—  Joseph  Kausler.  192 

—  Joseph  Stillman,  189 

—  Joseph  Walter,  188 

—  Julia,  189 

—  Juliet.  190 

—  Leverett,  185,  186 

—  Lillie  C.  189 

—  Louisa  Bowman  (Sewall),  192 

—  Louisa  Sewall,  192 

—  Lucretia,  190,  191 

—  Lucv,  191,  192 

—  Lucy  Ann  (Clark).  188 

—  Lucy  Chapline,  188 

—  Lucy  (—  ?)  Hough,  189 

—  Lucy  (Manwaring),  191 

—  Lucy  Sturgis,  191 

—  Lydia,  191 

—  Lydia  (Andrews),  189 

—  Lydia  (Coit),  191 

—  Lydia  Coit,  191.  192 

—  Mabel  Clark,  188 

—  Mabel  (Russell),  186 

—  Margaret,  181,  183,  184,  185,  191 

—  Maria,  189 

—  Maria  (Sully),  192 

—  Martha,  190,  191,  192 

—  Martha  (Bradley),  187 

—  Martha  (Coit),  190 

—  Martha  Dorman,  1S8 

—  Martha  Rebecca,  188 

—  Martha  Saltonstall,  192 

—  Mary,  184,  185,  186,  189,  190,   192, 

194 


Hubbard,  Mary  Adelaide,  191 

—  Mary  Anne  (Greene),  *190 

—  Mary  (Chadwell),  192 

—  Mary  E.  L.  (Massey),  189 

—  Mary  (Gillam)  Seppins,  185 

—  Mary  (Gray),  190 

—  Mary  (Greene).  190,  192 

—  Mary  Greene,  191,  192 

—  Mary  (Hallam),  190 

—  Mary  Josephine  (Allen),  192 

—  Marv  Louisa,  191 

—  Mary  (—  ?)  Pearce.  183 

—  Mary  Quarrier,  188 

—  Mary  (Rogers),  181,  183 

—  Mary  (Russell),  187 

—  Mary  Susan  (Kausler),  192 

—  Marv  Timmins,  191 

—  Mary  (Whitehead  ?)  1S6 

—  Nancy  (Conaway),  188 

—  Nathaniel,  183,  184,  185,  186 

—  Phebe  (McCleve),  1S6 

—  Rebecca,  1*8 

—  Rebecca  (Dickerman),  187 

—  Rebecca  (Smith)  Gore,  185 

—  Richard,  185 

—  Russell,  187,  188,  190 

—  Russell  Sturgis,  191 

—  Sally  (Peck),  188 

—  Sally  (Thompson),  188 

—  Samuel,  190, 192 

—  Sarah,  184,  185,  186 

—  Sarah  Dana,  188 

—  Sarah  H.  (Paddock),  189 

—  Sarah  (Whitehead),  186 

—  Sophia  K.,  188 

—  Stephen  Whitehead,  187 

—  Stiles.  188 

—  Susan,  190 

—  Susannah,  185 

—  Thomas,  189,  190 

—  Thomas  Greene,  190,  192 

—  William.  181,  182,  183,  185,  187, 188, 

190,  191.  192 

—  William  Abdial,  187 

—  William  B..  189 

—  William  Dana,  188 

—  William  Joseph,  191 

Hull,  Jane  Elizabeth  (Hough),  tlSS 

—  Hobart  C,  188 
Hutchinson,  Gov.  Thomas,  182 
Jackson,  Henry  Hubbard,  *192 

—  John  Cotton,  192 

—  Louisa  Sewall,  *192 

—  Louisa  Sewall  (Hubbard),  192 

—  Rossiter  Cotton,  *192 
Jo*s.  Frederick  A.,  188 

—  Mary  Quarrier  (Hubbard),  188 
Kay.  Anne  (Hubbard),  186 

—  Nathaniel,  186 

Lathrop.  Lydia  (Hubbard),  191 

—  Thomas,  191 
Leverett,  John,  184 

—  Sarah  (— '!)  Sedgwick,  184 
Lewis,  John,  186 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  186 
Livermore,  Edward.  192 

—  Elizabeth  Greene  (Hubbard).  192 
Lowder  (?),  Mary  (Hubbard),  185 

—  William,  185 
Manwaring.  David.  191 

—  Martha  (Saltonstall),  191 

—  Robert,  190 

—  Susan  (Hubbard)  Bushnell,  190 
Massey,  Solon,  189 

Mather,  Cotton,  182 

—  Increase,  1S2 
McCulloch,  J.  W.  B.  T.,  191 
Merriman,  Eli  Ives,  *189 

—  Eliza  Ann,  *189 

—  Elizabeth,  *189 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  189 

—  Henry  Stiles,  *190 

—  Ira,  189 


Merriman.  Ira  Hubbard,  1S9 

—  Jane  Elizabeth.  *1S9 

—  Mary  Elizabeth,  tl89 

—  Marv  Ely  (  Miller),  189 

—  Susan,  *189 

Merwin,  Anna  (Hubbard),  188 

—  John  W..  188 
Middleton.  Faith  (Gillam),  185 

—  Matthew.  185 
Miller,  N.  F.,  189 

—  Nancv  Humphrey  (Ely),  189 
Munday,  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  185 

—  James,  185 
Nevans,  Nathan,  185 
Nevins,  David,  190 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  185,  190 
Oliver,  Ann  (Hubbard).  185,  186 

—  Edward  Bartlett.  186 

—  Hubbard,  *185 
Parkinson,  Mary  (Reading),  191 

—  William,  191 

Paxton,  Faith    (Gillam)    Middleton, 
1*5 

—  Wentworth,  185 
Pearce,  Samuel,  183 
Perkins,  James,  192 

—  Joanna  (Mascerine).  192 
Phillips,  Hannah  (Gillam),  185 

—  Samuel,  185 
Putnam.  Israel,  187 
Pyncheon,  Amy  (Wyllis),  184 

—  Catharine  (  iirown),  184 

—  John, *184 

—  Margaret.  *1S4 

—  Margaret  (Hubbard),  183,  184 

—  William,  *184 

Rice,  Abby  C.  (  —  ?)  Smith,  189 

—  Benjamin  Hulsev,  *1",9 

—  Ella  Maria,  tl89 

—  Emily  (Lane).  189 

—  Emily  Rebecca,  *1S9 

—  Emma  Jane,  tl89 

—  Fanny  (Brooks),  189 

—  Henrv,  *189 

—  Hinsdale  Silliman,  *189 

—  Jane.  *188 

—  John  Willis,  +1>9 

—  Joseph,  *189 

—  Levi  Woodbury,  tl89 

—  Mary,  *188 

—  Mary  Ameret,  +189 

—  Mary  Ann,  +189 

—  Mary  Ann  (Bradley).  189 

—  Nancy  (Munson).  189 

—  Phebe  Rebecca,  *189 

—  Rebecca  (Hubbard),  188 

—  Ruth  Curtis.  *1S8 

—  Silas.  *1S8.  189 
Rogers.  John.  182 

—  Margaret  (Crane),  181 

—  Nathaniel,  181 
Ruggles,  John,  184 

—  Mary  (Gibson).  184 

—  Mary  (Hubbard),  184 

—  Thomas,  *184 
Russell,  Daniel.  1S6 

—  Matilda  (— ?),  186 

—  Mehitable  (Wyllis),  186 

—  Richard,  186 
Savage.  Thomas,  185 

Shanklin,  Mabel  Clark  (Hubbard),  188 

—  William  C,  1S8 

Shields,  Asenath  (Hubbard)  188 

—  Ida  May,  *188 

—  William  B..  188 

Shumacher,  Eliza  Chaplin  (Hubbard), 
191 

—  Johannes,  191 

Silliman,  Amelia  (Hubbard)  187 

—  Hezekiah,  187 
Stevenson,  Charles,  192 

—  Jane  (Hubbard),  192 
Stiles,  Amelia,  *187 


IXDEX. 


495 


Stiles,  Elizabeth.  *187 

—  Elizabeth  (Hubbard),  186 

—  Ezra,  186,  *1S7 

—  Isaac,  lt-6.  *187 

—  Keziah  Taylor,  *187 

—  Mary,  *187 

—  Ruth.  *1^7 

—  Sarah,  *1S7 

Sturgis.  Mary  Greene  (Hubbard),  191 

—Russell,  191 

Stuyvesant,  Peter,  184 

Swann,  Elizabeth  B.  (Lyon),  194 

—  Thomas  Laurens,  194 
Sylvester,  Giles.  1*5 

—  Hannah  (Savage)  Gillam,  135 
Tailer,  Elizabeth  (—  ?),  185 

—  John, 1S5 
Townsend,  Gregory,  190 

—  Lucretia  (Hubbard),  190 
Tracy,  Dauiel,  19<J 

—  Lucretia,  190 


Trumbull,  John,  18ti 

—  Sarah  (Hubbard),  1S6 
Tuttle,  Alice  Rebecca,  +139 

—  Betsey  (Hubbard),  189 

—  Edmund,  189 

—  Edward  Hubbard,  *1S9 

—  Ellen  Eunice,  +189 

—  Emily  Rebecca  JRicc),  *189 

—  Harriet  Winslow,  *189 

—  Mary  Ella,  *189 

—  Samuel  A.,  189 

Upson,  Emma  Adelaide,  tl89 

—  Mary  A.  (Hough),  *1-j9 

—  Mary  Elodene.  tl89 

—  Miles  Evelin,  tl89 

—  Miles  S.,  189 

—  Sally,  tl89 

Weaver,  George  Norman,  1S8 

—  Martha  Dorman  (Hubbard),  188 
White.  Anne  Gordon  (Hubbard),  191 

—  James  T.,  191 


White,  Mary  (Dyer),  187 

—  Stephen,  1*7 
Whitwell.  Elizabeth,  *192 

—  Marv  Greene  i  Hubbard),  192 

—  Mary  Hubbard,  *192 

—  William  Scollay,  *192 
Wilcox.  Albert  Henry,  tl90 

—  Henry  S..  189.  19(5 

—  Jane  Elizabeth  (Merriman).  *189 
Woodbridge,  Mehitable  (Wyllis)  Rus- 
sell, 186 

—  Samuel,  186 
Wright,  Daniel,  190 

—  Martha  (  Hubbard),  190 
Wyllis,  Ruth  (Haynes),  1S6 

—  Samuel.  1S6 

Young,  Benjamin  Loring,  *192 

—  Charlotte.  *194 

—  Charlotte  Wright  (Hubbard),  194 

—  Margaret,  *194 


POSTSCRIPT    INDEX— (Late    Arrivals), 


Adams,  Alice  Chandler  (Stuart),  451 

—  Chesley,  451 
Alden,  John,  451 

Beers,  Annie  (Hubbard),  453 

—  Henry  A.,  453 
Blake,  Benjamin,  450 

—  Caroline.  451 

—  Fannie  B.,  453  :  Jane,  450 

—  Virginia  Maury  (Otey),  t450 
Brewer,  Annette  (Fitch).  t454 

—  I.C.,  454 

Buckner,  Melinda  (Minor),  t450 
Catlin,  Ann.  45:! 

Cnandler,      Alice    Elizabeth    Taylor 
(Scott).  t451 

—  William  Timothy,  451 
Chevis,  Patsy  (Minor),  t450 
Clame,  Maria,  453 
Crutchfield.  Malvina,  t451 

—  Stapleton,  t45l 
Dean.  Polly.  453 
Durfey,  Benjamin,  453 

—  Jane  V.  (Hubbard),  453 
Fitch.  Alta  Direxa,  t454 

—  Annette,  t454 

—  Catherine  Hubbard,  t454 

—  Catharine  Maria  (Hubbard),  454 

—  Charles  Gilman,  t454 

—  Edward  Hubbard,  +*454 

—  Elizabeth  Gilman.  +454 

—  Fanny  Catherine,  *454 

—  Flora  Cornelia,  +454 

—  James  (Rev.),  454 

—  Orrawel  Hinckley,  454 

—  Winchester,  +454 
Gregory,  Sarah.  451 
Hart,  James  Edward,  +451 

—  Jane  Blake  (Minor),  +451 

—  Malvina  Meade.  +451 

—  Mary  Randolph,  +451 

—  William  Timothy.  451 

—  Virginia  Minor,  +451 

—  William  Taylor,  +451 

Haskell.     Fanny    Catherine    (Fitch), 
*454 

—  Marshall  H.,  454 

Howry,  Martha  P.  Hubbard-,  454 
Hubbard,  Abbie  J.  (Wells),  453 

—  Alexander,  453 

—  Alta  Direxa  (Winchester),  454 

—  Ann.  450.  451  ;  Ann  (Catlin),  453 

—  Annie,  453 

—  Arabella  Stuart,  410  ;  Austin,  427 

—  Carrie  A,,  427 

—  Catherine  (Hulbert),  454 

—  Catherine  Maria.  454 

—  Clarence  A..  410 

—  Docitheus.  454 

—  Edwin  S.,  453  ;  Elisha,  454 

—  Eunice  (Temple),  454  :  F.  C,  427 

—  Fannie  B.  (Blake),  453 


Hubbard,  Florence.  410 

—  Harriet  Maria  (Parsons),  454 

—  Harvey,  427 

—  Helen  Blanchard,  410 

—  Henry  P.,  453  ;  Herman  H.,  427 

—  Hiram  B.,  453 

—  James,  427.  450,  451,  452,  453 

—  Jane  V.,  45o 

—  Jonathan,  427 

—  John.  427;  John  H.,  453 

—  John  Itheal,  410 

—  John  Paddelford,  454 

—  John  T.,  453 

—  Joseph.  427  ;   Joseph  A.,  453 

—  Julia  A.  (Dodge),  453 

—  Julianna,  454 

—  Loren  M.,  427 

—  Lucy  L.  (Smith).  410 

—  M.C.,  427;  M.  H.,  427 

—  Manclain  (Van  Duesen),  453 

—  Maria  (Clame).  453 

—  Marion  B.  (Perry),  453 

—  Martha  P.,  454 

—  Mary  (Temple).  454 

—  Mary  Todd,  450 

—  Orlo,  427  ;  Parley,  453 

—  Phebe  (Paddelford),  454 

—  Philip  P.,  453 

—  Polly  (Dean).  453 

—  Royal  Preseott,  427 

—  Seth,  427  :  Solomon,  427 

—  Tamar,  454 

—  Thomas  S.,  427 

—  Titus.  454 

—  W.  L.,  427 

—  Wilder  D.,  427 

—  William  A.,  410,  454 
Hulbert,  Catherine,  454 
Lamar,  Annie  Cazenove,  451 
Lovelace,  Eliza  Wyatt,  451 
Mann.  Julia  Isabel,  451 
Minor,  Alice  Taylor.  +450 

—  Ann  Elizabeth,  451 

—  Ann  Hubbard.  +450 

—  Ann  Maria,  +450,  451 

—  Annie  Cazenove  (Lamar),  t450 

—  Benjamin  Blake,  +451 

—  Blake  Minor,  451 

—  Caroline  (Blake),  451 

—  Elizabeth.  +450 

—  Elizabeth  Hubbard  (Taylor),  *450, 

451 

—  Eliza  Wyatt  (Lovelace),  451 

—  Ellen  Jackson,  +451 

—  Francis  Woolfolk,  451  ;  Jr.,  451 

—  Hervey  Otey,  451 

—  Hubbard  Taylor,  +451 

—  James,  +450 

—  Jane,  +461  ;  Jane  Blake,  450,  +451 

—  Jefferson,  +450 

—  John,  +450 


Minor,  Julia  Isabel  (Mann),  451 

—  Leonidas  Cobb,  +451 

—  Lewellvn  Davis,  451 

—  Lucy.  +450 

—  Maria  Louisa,  451 

—  Marv  Emma.  451 

—  Melinda,  +450 

—  Oscar,  +451 

—  Patsy,  +450 

—  Paul  Hooker,  +451 ;  Preston,  451 

—  Sarah,  +450 

—  Thomas,  +450,  451 

—  Thomas  Aldridge,  4  451 

—  Viola  Virginia,  +451 

—  Virginia  Lee.  451 

—  Walter  Carroll,  451 

—  Washington,  +451 

—  William  Pannill,  +451 
Mullins.  Priscilla,  451 

Otey.  James  Hervey  (Rt.  Rev.),  451 

—  Virginia  Maury,  +451 
Paddelford.  Phebe.  454 
Parsons.  Harriet  Maria,  454 
Perry,  Marion  B..  453 
Rosecranz,  Caroline  Maria,  454 
Rowe,  Edgar  Haley,  451 

—  Edgar  Scott,  4M 

—  Mary  Emma  (Minor),  451 
Scott,  Alice  Elizabeth  Taylor,  +451 

—  Francis  Woolfolk,  451 
Smith,  Lucy  L.,  410 
Stuart,  Alice  Chandler,  451 

—  Charles  B.,  451 

—  Francis  Woolfolk,  451 

—  James,  451 

—  Maria  Louisa  (Minor),  451 
Tavlor,  Alice,  *450 

—  Ann,  *450 

—  Ann  (Hubbard),  450,  451 

—  Colby,  450 

—  Edmund,  *450 

—  Elizabeth  Hubbard.  *450 

—  Hubbard.  *450.  451 

—  James.  *450,  451 

—  Lucy,  *450  ;  Lucy  (Minor),  +450 

—  Mary  Todd,  *4£0 

—  Patsy,  450 

—  Reuben  Thornton,  *450 

—  Zachary.  450,  451 
Temple,  Mary  or  Eunice,  454 
Thompson,  Martha.  451 
Van  Duesen,  Manclain,  453 
Wade,  Benj.  F.,  454 

—  Caroline  Maiia  Rosecranz,  454 

—  Henry  Parsons,  454  ;  Jas.  F.,  454 
Wells,  Abby  J.,  453 

Williams,  Arabella  Stuart  (Hubbard), 

410  ;    W.  S.,410 
Willard,  Juiia  H.,  454 
Winchester,  Alta  Direxa,  454 
Wyatt,  Sir  Francis,  451 


GREAT  THOUGHTS. 


"  Fame  comes  only  when  deserved,  and  then  it  is  as  inevitable  as  des- 
tiny, for  it  is  destiny." — Longfellow. 

W 

"  And  this  our  life,  exempt  from  public  haunt, 
Finds  tongues  in  trees,  books  in  running  brooks, 
Sermons  in  stones,  and  good  in  everything." 

— Shakespeare,  "As  Y on  Like  It." 

$k 

"  Fame,  we  may  understand,  is  no  sure  test  of  merit,  but  only  a  prob- 
ability of  such;  it  is  an  accident,  not  a  property  of  a  man." — Carlyle. 

W 

"  We  sleep,  but  the  loom  of  life  never  stops;  and  the  pattern  which 
was  weaving  when  the  sun  went  down  is  weaving  when  it  comes  up 
to-morrow." — Henry  Ward  Beecher. 


496 


of 


and 


of 


And  the  Lord  said  unto  Moses,  write  this  for  a  Memorial  in  a  Book— Exodus.  17:  xiv. 


These  blank  pages  are  intended  for  a  continuation  of  lines  of  descent. 
Births,  baptisms,  marriages,  deaths,  burials,  and  biographies  can  be 
herein  inscribed,  and  descent  lines  continued  from  the  point  where 
they  are  dropped  in  the  book.  From  time  to  time  these  pages  can  be 
printed,  if  desired,  and  neatly  pasted  in  the  book.  Preserved  Genea- 
logical Records  are  many  times  of  great  value  in  restoring  property  to 
rightful  heirs,  which  otherwise  might  be  lost  to  them.  Keep  your 
records  carefully  from  now  on,  together  with  interesting  facts  in  family 
history.  It  will  make  interesting  reading  for  future  generations  and 
aid  in  the  preparation  of  historical  data  a  century  hence. 
497 


498  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY 

BIRTHS. 

Born  . .to 


Name. 


The  above  are  suggestive  forms  for  careful  records. 


FAMILY  RECORDS. 


499 


and 


at 


500  HUBBARD  HISTORY  AND  GENEALOGY. 

BIRTHS. 

Born _ to_ _ 


Name. 


FAMILY  RECORDS.  501 


and at 


502  FAMILY  RECORDS. 


MARRIAGES. 


At ,   - 18. 

of 

Parents'  Name 


FAMILY  RECORDS. 


^6 


bv_ 


to , of 

Parents'  Name 


504  FAMILY  RECORDS. 

MARRIAGES. 

At .18 

of 

Parents'  Name 


FAMILY  RECORDS.  505 


bv. 


to of 

Parents'   Name 


5o6  FAMILY  RECORDS. 

DEATHS. 


At 

Buried   at. 
Remarks.. 


FAMILY  RECORDS.  5°7 


Aged of 

Parents"    names 


5  o8  FA  MIL  \ '  RECORDS. 

DEATHS. 

At iS. 

Buried   at. _ 

Remarks. _ 


/•".  I  MIL  Y  RECORDS.  5  09 


A  ged_ _ <  »f 

Parents'   names 


5l°  FAMILY  RECORDS. 


HISTORICAL  MEMORANDA. 


DUE  DATE 

~ni  Y 

Pto"  in 

5T 

J-JL 

bi  ^     I  J1 

3L 

tt 

iy    OCT 

1  0  N95 

:           • 

i- .'      ~ 

r  oro  ^  Q 

VWi 

gl: 

[  3tr  J  u 

r  IQQfi 

FtBl 

Jj  iso* 

201-6503 

Printed 
in  USA 

COLUMBIA  UNIVERSITY  LIBRARIES 


0068098227 


9Z9.Z 


